2,137 research outputs found
A characteristic particle method for traffic flow simulations on highway networks
A characteristic particle method for the simulation of first order
macroscopic traffic models on road networks is presented. The approach is based
on the method "particleclaw", which solves scalar one dimensional hyperbolic
conservations laws exactly, except for a small error right around shocks. The
method is generalized to nonlinear network flows, where particle approximations
on the edges are suitably coupled together at the network nodes. It is
demonstrated in numerical examples that the resulting particle method can
approximate traffic jams accurately, while only devoting a few degrees of
freedom to each edge of the network.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. Accepted to the proceedings of the Sixth
International Workshop Meshfree Methods for PDE 201
Multi-level agent-based modeling - A literature survey
During last decade, multi-level agent-based modeling has received significant
and dramatically increasing interest. In this article we present a
comprehensive and structured review of literature on the subject. We present
the main theoretical contributions and application domains of this concept,
with an emphasis on social, flow, biological and biomedical models.Comment: v2. Ref 102 added. v3-4 Many refs and text added v5-6 bibliographic
statistics updated. v7 Change of the name of the paper to reflect what it
became, many refs and text added, bibliographic statistics update
A Survey on platoon-based vehicular cyber-physical systems
Vehicles on the road with some common interests can cooperatively form a platoon-based driving pattern, in which a vehicle follows another one and maintains a small and nearly constant distance to the preceding vehicle. It has been proved that, compared to driving individually, such a platoon-based driving pattern can significantly improve the road capacity and energy efficiency. Moreover, with the emerging vehicular adhoc network (VANET), the performance of platoon in terms of road capacity, safety and energy efficiency, etc., can be further improved. On the other hand, the physical dynamics of vehicles inside the platoon can also affect the performance of VANET. Such a complex system can be considered as a platoon-based vehicular cyber-physical system (VCPS), which has attracted significant attention recently. In this paper, we present a comprehensive survey on platoon-based VCPS. We first review the related work of platoon-based VCPS. We then introduce two elementary techniques involved in platoon-based VCPS: the vehicular networking architecture and standards, and traffic dynamics, respectively. We further discuss the fundamental issues in platoon-based VCPS, including vehicle platooning/clustering, cooperative adaptive cruise control (CACC), platoon-based vehicular communications, etc., and all of which are characterized by the tight coupled relationship between traffic dynamics and VANET behaviors. Since system verification is critical to VCPS development, we also give an overview of VCPS simulation tools. Finally, we share our view on some open issues that may lead to new research directions
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Destination-based Routing and Circuit Allocation for Future Traffic Growth
Internet traffic continues to grow relentlessly, driven largely by increasingly high- \\ resolution video streaming, the increasing adoption of cloud computing, the emergence of 5G networks, and the ever-growing reach of social media and social networks. Existing networks use packet switching to route packets on a hop-by-hop basis from the source to the destination. However, they suffer from two shortcomings. First, in existing networks, packets are routed along a fixed shortest path using the Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) protocol or obliviously load-balanced across equal-cost paths using the Equal-Cost Multi-Path (ECMP) protocol. These routing protocols do not fully utilize the network capacity because they do not adapt to network congestions in their routing decisions. Second, although studies have shown that the majority of packets processed by Internet routers are pass-through traffic, packets nonetheless have to be queued and routed at every hop in existing networks, which unnecessarily adds substantial delays and processing costs.In this thesis, we present two new approaches to overcome these shortcomings. First, we propose new backpressure-based routing algorithms which use only shortest-path routes when they are sufficient to accommodate the given traffic load, but will incrementally expand routing choices as needed to accommodate increasing traffic loads. This avoids the poor delay performance inherent in backpressure-based routing algorithms where packets may take long detours under light or moderate loads, and still retains the notable advantage, the network-wide optimal throughput, because packets are adaptively routed along less congested paths.Second, we propose a unified packet and circuit switched network in which the underlying optical transport is used to circuit-switch pass-through traffic by means of pre-established circuits. This avoids unnecessary packet queuing delays and processing costs at each hop. We propose a novel convex optimization framework based on a new destination-based multicommodity flow formulation for the allocation of circuits in such unified networks
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