Skip to main content

Programming a smoother commute

Work being carried out by the University of Toronto’s Intelligent Transportation Systems Centre could have a beneficial effect on the city’s congestion problems. Says Professor Baher Abdulhai of the Centre, "Everybody realises that we have a big congestion problem in Toronto and the scarier part is that it's getting worse, exponentially." One of the solutions he's working on is smarter traffic lights using artificial intelligence to control the flow of traffic. "Each traffic light would learn how to time i
January 18, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
Work being carried out by the University of Toronto’s Intelligent Transportation Systems Centre could have a beneficial effect on the city’s congestion problems.

Says Professor Baher Abdulhai of the Centre, "Everybody realises that we have a big congestion problem in Toronto and the scarier part is that it's getting worse, exponentially."

One of the solutions he's working on is smarter traffic lights using artificial intelligence to control the flow of traffic. "Each traffic light would learn how to time itself, like green and yellow and so on and switch from a phase to another based on the actual traffic it sees and senses along the approaches to that intersection."

The new part, he says, is the lights would communicate wirelessly with nearby intersections to make sure they're working together to move traffic along. "They would negotiate with each other to come up with an optimal plan for the local conditions at a given traffic light but also taking in to consideration the neighbouring traffic lights," he says.

The results, he says, are very significant. In computer simulations, they tested an area of downtown bounded by Bathurst Street, Front Street, the Don Valley parkway and Lake Ontario. Using their software, he says they found the average delay was reduced 40 per cent. In some key intersections, he says delays were down 60 to 70 per cent.

"It's better for the environment, better for overall travel time but significantly better at intersections themselves."

About 15 per cent of the city's 2200 traffic lights are currently controlled by a SCOOT system, which uses sensors embedded in the roads to monitor and adjust the timing of the lights based on traffic patterns. It's connected to the city's central traffic command centre. The technology is about 20 years old and is showing its age. The city is currently undergoing a year-long review of the system but says the new technology still needs to be proven.

The proving ground for the technology could be a business park in Burlington. Transportation planners there are looking at the technology to solve congestion at a major intersection, where rush hour congestion from the surrounding offices had officials considering an US$8-million re-build of the intersection.

Abdulhai and his team demonstrated that their system could achieve improvements in traffic flow similar to the construction, but without the mess, and for a cost of about US$200,000.

Burlington's Director of Transportation Services Bruce Zvaniga calls the results of the simulations there ‘promising’, but says it is no silver bullet that would eliminate congestion altogether. He also notes there is a long time between the research phase and an on-street trial.

Over the next six months, Abdulhai is working with Burlington, testing the technology in the lab using real-world hardware. He hopes the results will lead to field tests and encourage other municipalities to look at the technology.

Related Content

  • Tolling is a ‘powerful tool to maintain and manage an infrastructure network’
    August 15, 2017
    Officials have recently moved to scrap tolls on several highways for the first time in 40 years, bucking a national trend toward more tolls on mostly urban roadways to shift the costs of transportation to those who use the roads, writes Associated Press. A regional authority voted this week to eliminate tolls on the Cesar Chavez Border Highway in El Paso. On the same day, Dallas city council rejected plans to build a toll road along the Trinity River. The council's action appears to be the death knell for a
  • Smart signal software ‘has potential for ICM’
    September 26, 2013
    Software developed by researchers from the University of Minnesota for the Smart (Systematic Monitoring of Arterial Road and Traffic Signals) signal system automatically collects and processes data from traffic signal controllers at multiple intersections. It then creates performance measures, including information on the times and locations congestion occurs on a roadway. A new version of the software has been deployed at more than fifty intersections managed by the Minnesota Department of Transportatio
  • Siemens pushes smart learning through knowledge centre
    April 4, 2016
    The Siemens stand at Intertraffic is always much more than a place where products and systems are displayed. This year is no exception. Think of Stand 209 in Hall 11 as a knowledge centre, a smart learning place, a time machine that opens up views into the future and much more.
  • Central Europe signs up to ITS standards
    May 31, 2013
    Seamless multi-modal traveller information services are becoming reality in the Danube Region. On 15th of March 2013, a Hungarian national holiday of which many people were unaware, unexpected extreme winter weather paralysed Hungary as well as large parts of Slovakia. Several thousand people were stranded on the region’s highways and the railways incurred delays of several hours. Not only did the transport system in the affected regions break down, the information flow to neighbouring countries was very sl