A traffic signal control scheme in Utah is being taken up by other US authorities. David Crawford finds out how the Beehive State is leading the way in DoT and driver savings     
     
Growing numbers of US state departments of transportation (DoTs) and their road users are gaining real financial benefits from an advanced approach to traffic signal monitoring recently developed in Utah. 
     
Central to the system is its use of automated traffic signal performance measures (ATSPM) technology, brought in to improve the speed of delivery and accessibility of content of relevant data originating from on-road traffic controllers. Examples include flow rates, signal coordination and split failures (when green time fails to meet volume demand). As of 30 November 2018, 1,966 intersections with controllers were integrated into 
     
The controllers record their actions and time-stamp the enumerations at 1/10th resolution, 24/7, storing the results in temporary data files. At intervals - typically every 15 minutes – a traffic management centre server makes a file transfer protocol connection to retrieve the outcomes. Once collected, the system transfers these into a database, where they can be interpreted manually or with the aid of automated graphics, analysed visually or with an optimisation algorithm, and archived for later comparative analysis.
     
 
Easy viewing
     
The system enables users to view easily the information they need, for example on traffic detector status, in order to control hardware or influence signal timing and coordination without their having to install special software, or manage network connections or firewalls. Utah DoT traffic signal operations engineer Mark Taylor told ITS International: “Staff can use ATSPMs to measure directly what they could previously only estimate and model. The new approach allows an agency such as ours effectively to manage and optimise its traffic signals without the cost of extensive fieldwork, and to visualise the data in a web-based and easy-to-understand format”. 
     
The results are also being made available to the motoring public – Utah says it aims to be the most transparent DoT in the US. Detector status is a key output. Each day at 7am, Utah DoT and its partner agencies in the state receive an automated email detailing vehicle and pedestrian detectors that have malfunctioned since the last sending. An algorithm searches through five categories (including the absence of any ATSPM data), flags the intersections that have experienced problems and sends out an e-alert to enable diagnosis and remedial action - before motorists note what is happening and call in to complain.
 
Sharing benefits
     
For  Taylor, “the brilliance of the automated alerts is that the algorithm is  detector vendor-neutral and will work for all types of equipment - for  example, inductive loops, video, magnetometers or radar - as it uses the  amount or lack of data during certain time periods to generate the  report”.
     
Between 1 January  and 8 November 2018, the automated system found 637 issues with  detectors that needed to be repaired, mostly before notification by the  travelling public. “It’s obvious that ATSPMs are being used multiple  times each day to improve the Utah transportation network and  demonstrate its worth.”
     
Table  1 shows the number of times a report was run for each of a range of key  metrics over an earlier 10-month period. The detection-derived savings  ($3.06m) were to motorists in their travel times, calculated as being  worth $15 per hour. Taylor calculated that, if the equipment was not  working properly and Utah DoT had no automated system for being  notified, “it would probably take road users up to 30 days to make a  complaint”. He estimates the savings, for example from not having to  carry out traffic counts, at $160,000. Since 2012, the agency estimates  that it has spent some 12,000 hours in developing the ATSPM open-source  software.
     
 Sharing the  ATSPM software – and its benefits - with other US agencies  is integral  to Utah DoT’s approach; it charges no usage fee, thus  reducing  followers’ costs. An early adopter was Virginia DoT, one of  whose  officials attended a 2015 Utah DoT workshop and then decided to  trial  the system on an 18-intersection corridor along a heavily  trafficked  section of US highway 29.  
     
Deployments   in other US states include that of Georgia DoT, which won it first   place in the innovation category of the 2018 Best of ITS Awards given by   
     
 
New incentive
     
A   further incentive for agencies has emerged with the recent  publication,  by consultants Kittelson and Associates and Indiana’s  Purdue University  (see box), of a guidebook on Performance-Based  Management of Traffic  Signals. This gives agencies advice on the  specification, adoption and  application of ATSPMs for smaller as well  as larger systems. Meanwhile,  equipment vendors have begun to include  the necessary metrics in their  products.
     
A  2014 review by  Purdue had already identified the longer-term  consequences of a lack of  adequate signal performance reporting,  resulting in the actual quality  of operations often being unknown,  while its impacts are “often  underestimated in the programming of  budgets and staffing levels”. Even  when adequate resources are  available, it can still be challenging to  allocate resources if there  is limited knowledge about which locations  are operating well and which  are not, the review says.
     
“Signal   controllers and detection systems typically feature some functions for   reporting a variety of errors,” it goes on. “However, usually this   information is not easy to acquire remotely and is not always logged”.
     
For   the majority of the 300,000-plus signals operating across the US,   retimings take place on a three- to five-year cycle, at a cost of around   $4,500 per intersection, with complaints from road users as the  primary  source of information on interim performance. 
     
As   the US 
    
From the ground up        
        
The story began in 2012 when Utah DoT, following its long-established practice of sending engineers to the annual Washington DC meeting of the US Transport Research Board to garner fresh ideas, learned about an ATSPM approach that had been developed by 
Purdue University. Its personnel subsequently visited Utah DoT to explain their initiative, developed with partners including Econolite, Peek and Siemens, and encouraged the department to develop its own software - which it did from the ground up. 
        
Purdue provided specialist guidance on individual metrics. Utah DoT was in the position of being able to build on its prior investments in communications networks, which made possible a rollout to 1027 intersections in 2013. Utah DoT traffic signal operations engineer Mark Taylor said: “Our technology is a good example of how such a system can be quickly deployed when there is an excellent data infrastructure in place.”
        
Between 1 August 2013 and 31 May 2014, while the concept of ATSPMs was still relatively new, Utah DoT tracked how often performance measures were being used to locate faulty vehicle detection, and when these measures were used to improve operations at an intersection - such as automated counts for model optimisation and making time-of-day adjustments to signal coordination. 
        
See Table 1 above        
    
    
        
        
        



