Skip to main content

Smart ideas on blockchain or AI? Call FHWA!

The US Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) is calling for new ideas about how to use blockchain technology and artificial intelligence (AI) for the benefit of transportation.
By Adam Hill February 21, 2020 Read time: 1 min
FHWA thinks blockchain has possibilities (© Siarhei Yurchanka | Dreamstime.com)

FHWA put out a so-called broad agency announcement (BAA), saying that it intends to award contracts to research projects “that could lead to transformational changes and truly revolutionary advances in highway engineering and intermodal surface transportation in the US”.

In particular it thinks blockchain “has the potential to transform the connected and automated vehicle industry” by creating a platform to share vehicle and infrastructure data securely.
 
“With the advent of high speed wireless technology, services for highway transportation based on blockchain technology could provide security and scalability at lower costs than current private network solutions or could provide novel functions that solve needs that technologies currently used in highway transportation do not,” the BAA says.

FHWA is looking for blockchain-related proposals which examine real-time communication for connected vehicle applications, road pricing and geofencing roadway segments.

When it comes to AI in transportation, the agency would be interested in areas such as integrating traditional and non-traditional highway data to better explain and predict system performance and improving sensor signal data to assess current conditions of pavements.

Interested parties can register here. Closing date for submissions is 20 March.
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • How safe are smart motorways?
    March 3, 2020
    A valiant attempt to ease the UK’s congested strategic road system? Or an idea that should never have seen the light of day? Alan Dron reports on the controversy over smart motorways...
  • Investment and innovation the future of ITS
    January 31, 2012
    Cisco's Paul Brubaker, former administrator of the US Department of Transportation's (USDOT's) Research and Innovative Technology Administration (RITA), takes a look at how the ITS sector is starting to attract the attention of major corporations and what this will mean for intelligent transportation in the coming years
  • Keeping a weather eye on road conditions
    September 26, 2014
    Drive C2X has shown that advanced warning of poor road conditions could cut fatalities, as David Crawford explains. Connected vehicle (CV)-based warning technologies could mean 6% fewer deaths and 5% fewer injuries in road traffic accidents in Europe, according to the final results of the European Commission (EC) co-funded DRIVE C2X project. According to the European Centre for Information and Communication Technologies (EICT) which provided management support, these “prove that CV systems work and can hav
  • Cubic: predictive analytics is putting fortune tellers out of business
    November 23, 2018
    The rise of machine learning and artificial intelligence means that fortune tellers will soon be out of business. Ed Chavis takes a behind the scenes look at the world of predictive analytics ver since organisations started taking advantage of insights derived from Big Data, data scientists concentrated their efforts on the ability to make correct assumptions about the future. A few years later, with the help of automation, developments in machine learning (ML) and advancements in the application of a