Skip to main content

Predicting and solving future transport problems?

Can the future be predicted? With what accuracy can ‘predictive analytics’ be used to help anticipate demand? This is a relatively new science for transportation and over the next few years it will be interesting to see to what extent it can solve some common problems. Transportation authorities may be close to finding the golden chalice that is accurate prediction of how traffic will behave as congestion occurs. Predictive algorithms are not necessarily new, but the coming together of conditions needed for
August 10, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
Jon Masters ITS International Editor
Can the future be predicted? With what accuracy can ‘predictive analytics’ be used to help anticipate demand? This is a relatively new science for transportation and over the next few years it will be interesting to see to what extent it can solve some common problems.

Transportation authorities may be close to finding the golden chalice that is accurate prediction of how traffic will behave as congestion occurs. Predictive algorithms are not necessarily new, but the coming together of conditions needed for their application to transportation are. In the US, systems of software including ‘predictive engines’ are being combined with other deployed ITS technology of traffic management.

Team leaders of the two ‘Integrated Corridor Management’ (ICM) pilot projects acknowledge that the predictive models of their decision support systems will take time to evolve, because modelling the fluent and complex behaviour of traffic is an iterative process. The computational science behind it is well developed, however, so there is every chance that after a few iterations of tweaking the models’ constants and calibration, the ICM operators will be able to predict what’s coming and act accordingly.

The possibilities would seem to be endless. Another pilot project – LA Express Park – is using complex demand models to set dynamic pricing of parking for reducing inner-city congestion; and the same principles are being studied for application to high occupancy toll lanes. As 4186 Xerox’s chief technology officer Natesh Manikoth says, other countries are likely to come to the same point.

Take India as an example of a path many nations are on or likely to follow. Our series of features beginning reveals where India is at now with its urban and inter-urban transportation. City networks are being modernised with emphasis on public transport. National highways are undergoing upgrade with national electronic tolling high on the agenda.

Developments in the US, Western Europe and elsewhere demonstrate what usually comes next: once highway networks become saturated – and further capacity building uneconomic – attentions turn to managing demand with ITS systems. Predictive modelling and the proactive network management it allows, appear to be crucial for getting real value from investments in ITS, for averting transport problems and effecting modal shift.

It will be some years before proof of this can be borne out. The ICM projects are at the cutting edge, but the majority of agencies are still at stages of ITS deployment.

Greater connectivity may speed up progress. Developments across the County of Los Angeles show what’s possible with wireless technology, so perhaps there will be an acceleration of predictive and proactive initiatives. A lot of data has to be collected and crunched and there are signs that this is happening, for public and private transport. “Imagine the power given to policymakers if they really could influence travel decisions,” says Manikoth. Power indeed.

As I write, the first events are now underway in the London 2012 Olympic Games – labelled by some as the first ‘public transport Olympics’. About 10 years back, London’s fledgling bid to host the 2012 Games was rumoured to be running a distant third to Paris and New York, largely due to the widely held belief that Britain’s capital city had a decrepit and inadequate transport system.

Then one of Britain’s most renowned transport planners stood up at an event and spelt out how London actually has a world class transport network – a little creaky, but with a little oil applied in places, one fit to accommodate an Olympic Games. A member of the International Olympic Committee was at that event. Some years later, not long after London had won the honour of hosting the 2012 Games, the transport planner told me he had received a postcard from the same IOC member. At the bottom it said: ‘Congratulations on winning my vote for London.’ Transport not a vital factor? Let the games begin.

Jon Masters

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • E-tolling is the new normal
    April 29, 2020
    Electronic tolling has become a cornerstone for the next wave of innovation, says IBTTA’s Bill Cramer. So is this the end of the road for toll plazas?
  • Smoothing out city freight movements
    May 28, 2014
    David Crawford welcomes a national first. Urban freight movements, while commercially and socially vital, are a growing logistical headache for planners and people alike. Figures from France’s Lyon Laboratory of Transport Economics indicate that goods transport in major urban areas accounts for: 20% of traffic; 35% of CO2 emissions made by all urban trips; and 50% of the diesel used; while final km delivery runs account for 20% of the total cost of the transport chain.
  • Solving Detroit’s jams: just ask a Michigan student
    October 17, 2019
    At the Institute of Transportation Engineers annual meeting, a clever student plan to reduce commute times in Detroit suggests the future of the ITS industry is in good hands, write Pete Spiller and Jarrod Cady A team of students from the University of Michigan won a national student Transportation Technology Tournament - sponsored by the National Operations Center of Excellence (NOCoE) and the US Department of Transportation - with a compelling presentation on reducing congestion. In an impressive d
  • Pricing practise for HOT lane operation
    May 11, 2017
    Timothy Compston weighs up the critical elements that keep the wheels of dynamic pricing schemes turning in today's high-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes. In the drive towards smarter tolling it is perhaps not surprising that sophisticated pricing algorithms are being rolled out to better reflect supply and demand on the roadway. This is the case with high-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes which a growing number of DoTs are seeing as a way of smoothing the operation of their existing, and planned, freeway infrastructure