9,098 research outputs found
iTETRIS: An Integrated Wireless and Traffic Platform for Real-Time Road Traffic Management Solutions
Wireless vehicular cooperative systems have been identified as an attractive solution to improve road traffic management, thereby contributing to the European goal of safer, cleaner, and more efficient and sustainable traffic solutions. V2V-V2I communication technologies can improve traffic management through real-time exchange of data among vehicles and with road infrastructure. It is also of great importance to investigate the adequate combination of V2V and V2I technologies to ensure the continuous and costefficient operation of traffic management solutions based on wireless vehicular cooperative solutions. However, to adequately design and optimize these communication protocols and analyze the potential of wireless vehicular cooperative systems to improve road traffic management, adequate testbeds and field operational tests need to be conducted.
Despite the potential of Field Operational Tests to get the first insights into the benefits and problems faced in the development of wireless vehicular cooperative systems, there is yet the need to evaluate in the long term and large dimension the true potential benefits of wireless vehicular cooperative systems to improve traffic efficiency. To this aim, iTETRIS is devoted to the development of advanced tools coupling traffic and wireless communication simulators
The Dynamics of Vehicular Networks in Urban Environments
Vehicular Ad hoc NETworks (VANETs) have emerged as a platform to support
intelligent inter-vehicle communication and improve traffic safety and
performance. The road-constrained, high mobility of vehicles, their unbounded
power source, and the emergence of roadside wireless infrastructures make
VANETs a challenging research topic. A key to the development of protocols for
inter-vehicle communication and services lies in the knowledge of the
topological characteristics of the VANET communication graph. This paper
explores the dynamics of VANETs in urban environments and investigates the
impact of these findings in the design of VANET routing protocols. Using both
real and realistic mobility traces, we study the networking shape of VANETs
under different transmission and market penetration ranges. Given that a number
of RSUs have to be deployed for disseminating information to vehicles in an
urban area, we also study their impact on vehicular connectivity. Through
extensive simulations we investigate the performance of VANET routing protocols
by exploiting the knowledge of VANET graphs analysis.Comment: Revised our testbed with even more realistic mobility traces. Used
the location of real Wi-Fi hotspots to simulate RSUs in our study. Used a
larger, real mobility trace set, from taxis in Shanghai. Examine the
implications of our findings in the design of VANET routing protocols by
implementing in ns-3 two routing protocols (GPCR & VADD). Updated the
bibliography section with new research work
Car-to-Cloud Communication Traffic Analysis Based on the Common Vehicle Information Model
Although connectivity services have been introduced already today in many of
the most recent car models, the potential of vehicles serving as highly mobile
sensor platform in the Internet of Things (IoT) has not been sufficiently
exploited yet. The European AutoMat project has therefore defined an open
Common Vehicle Information Model (CVIM) in combination with a cross-industry,
cloud-based big data marketplace. Thereby, vehicle sensor data can be leveraged
for the design of entirely new services even beyond traffic-related
applications (such as localized weather forecasts). This paper focuses on the
prediction of the achievable data rate making use of an analytical model based
on empirical measurements. For an in-depth analysis, the CVIM has been
integrated in a vehicle traffic simulator to produce CVIM-complaint data
streams as a result of the individual behavior of each vehicle (speed, brake
activity, steering activity, etc.). In a next step, a simulation of vehicle
traffic in a realistically modeled, large-area street network has been used in
combination with a cellular Long Term Evolution (LTE) network to determine the
cumulated amount of data produced within each network cell. As a result, a new
car-to-cloud communication traffic model has been derived, which quantifies the
data rate of aggregated car-to-cloud data producible by vehicles depending on
the current traffic situations (free flow and traffic jam). The results provide
a reference for network planning and resource scheduling for car-to-cloud type
services in the context of smart cities
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