Skip to main content

Inrix makes Signal Analytics available in UK

Firm says optimising signal timings at junctions can reduce carbon emissions from idling
By Adam Hill March 27, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Signal Analytics uses hundreds of millions of anonymous trips per day (© Photo London UK | Dreamstime.com)

Analytics specialist Inrix UK has made its Signal Analytics product available in the UK, which the company says is "easier, faster and cheaper" than installing traditional monitoring infrastructure at a junction.

Public sector agencies in Germany and the US are already using the junction and corridor analytics in a cloud-based platform, which is based exclusively on anonymous connected vehicle data.

Inrix says is designed for all levels of traffic professionals – management, engineering, operations and maintenance.

In the UK, Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM) is using Signal Analytics and is "looking to improve traffic signal junction efficiency whilst also providing pedestrian priority".

TfGM will also explore how Signal Analytics can assist with monitoring and evaluation of the junction upgrades and is looking more widely "for monitoring the network performance and identifying changes in driver behaviour".

TfGM wants to examine its potential "to maximise the benefits of data and connectivity to align with future connected services”.

Signal Analytics calculates industry-defined metrics including control delay, turn movements and observed vehicle counts, reporting network-wide metrics weekly in a web-based application available through Inrix IQ, a Software as a Service (SaaS) application suite.

Signal Analytics uses hundreds of millions of anonymous trips per day in the UK to deliver granular insights on signal-controlled junctions, continually collecting high accuracy vehicle data.

Inrix director Dominic Paulo says it will "further enable road authorities across the UK to fully understand signal performance, saving time, money, and help to further improve the environment".

Reducing excessive delays and optimising signal timings at junctions can reduce carbon emissions from idling.

Inrix calculated a 10-second reduction in every registered vehicle’s delay at signals daily would translate into 130,000 fewer metric tons of CO2 emitted annually.

Related Content

  • ITS adaptions enhance cycle safety in Dublin
    December 3, 2013
    Enabled and enforced by innovative use of ITS, Dublin’s new off-road cycle route is proving a hit with commuters, leisure cyclists and walkers alike as Brendan O’Brien explains. Dublin City Council’s vision is to create a city where people of all ages and abilities have the confidence, incentive and facilities to cycle. On-road cycle lanes had already been incorporated into the Quality Bus Corridors design and there is a mix of on- and off-road cycle routes. However, in 2010 the Council began work on a new
  • Iteris launches a clear guide for traffic signals
    April 12, 2024
    Signal Trends should allow more efficient, data-driven prioritisation of signal retiming
  • Cloud keeps UK traffic on the move
    November 23, 2021
    Sopra Steria is introducing the new digital infrastructure for National Highways' NTIS
  • TRB 2024 challenge spurs smart transportation innovation
    January 24, 2024
    The Center for Urban Informatics and Progress at UTC, Amazon Web Services, the National Science Foundation, the City of Chattanooga and ITS America sponsored the Transportation Forecasting Competition at TRB 2024: and the challenge threw up some fascinating projects