
Faculty of Engineering and Computing - Research
Faculty of Engineering and Computing
Congratulations to Puspita Deo
The title of Puspita's thesis is "Heterogeneous Motorised Traffic Flow Modelling using Cellular Automata".
She completed her PhD in the Modelling & Scientific Computing Group, School of Computing, DCU under the supervision of Professor Heather Ruskin.
Brief description of Project:
Traffic congestion is a major problem in most major cities around the world
with few signs that this is diminishing, despite management efforts. In
planning traffic management and control strategies at urban and inter urban
level, understanding the factors involved in vehicular progression is vital.
Most work to date has, however, been restricted to single vehicle-type
traffic.
A two-component cellular automata (2-CA) methodology is used to examine
traffic patterns for single-lane, multi-lane controlled and uncontrolled
intersections and roundabouts. In this heterogeneous model (binary mix),
space mapping rules are used for each vehicle type, namely long (double-
The impact of vehicle mix on the overall performance of an intersection and roundabout (one-lane one-way, one-lane two-way and two-lane two-way) has been examined. Investigation of performance metrics for heterogeneous traffic (short and long vehicles), can be shown to reproduce main aspects of real-world configuration performance. This has been validated, using local Dublin traffic data.
The developed model has potential to extend its use to linked transport network elements and can also incorporate further motorised and non-motorised vehicle diversity for various road configurations.
This project was funded by the School of Computing, DCU.
|