Traffic Simulation Paper
Traffic Simulation Paper
Traffic Simulation Paper
Norrkoping 2008
ISSN 0345-7524
Abstract
Microscopic traffic simulation has proven to be a useful tool for analysis
of various traffic systems. This thesis consider microscopic traffic simulation of rural roads and the use of traffic simulation for evaluation of
driver assistance systems.
A traffic simulation modelling framework for rural roads, the Rural Traffic Simulator (RuTSim), is developed. RuTSim is designed for
simulation of traffic on single carriageway two-lane rural roads and on
rural roads with separated oncoming traffic lanes. The simulated traffic
may be interrupted by vehicles entering and leaving the modelled road
at intersections or roundabouts.
The RuTSim model is applied for analysis of rural road design alternatives. Quality-of-service effects of three alternatives for oncoming lane
separation of an existing Swedish two-lane road are analysed. In another
model application, RuTSim is used to simulate traffic on a Dutch twolane rural road. This application illustrates that the high level of model
detail of traffic micro-simulation may call for use of different modelling
assumptions regarding driver behaviour for different applications, e. g.
for simulation of traffic in different cultural regions.
The use of traffic simulation for studies of driver assistance systems
facilitate impact analyses already at early stages of the system development. New and additional requirements are however then placed on
the traffic simulation model. It is necessary to model both the system
functionality of the considered driver assistance system and the driver
behaviour in system equipped vehicles. Such requirements can be analysed using RuTSim.
In this thesis, requirements on a traffic simulation model to be used
for analysis of road safety effects of driver assistance systems are formulated and investigated using RuTSim. RuTSim is also applied for
analyses of centre line rumble strips on two-lane roads, of an overtaking
assistant and of adaptive cruise control. These studies establish that
the assumptions made regarding driver behaviour are crucial for traffic
simulation based analyses of driver assistance systems.
iii
Popul
arvetenskaplig sammanfattning
Trafiksimulering ar ett anvandbart verktyg for att utvardera olika forslag
till forandringar i vagtrafiksystemet. Till exempel kan vagutformningsalternativ, nya vagstrackningar eller trafikregleringar vagas mot varandra med hjalp av trafiksimulering. En trafiksimuleringsmodell beskriver
trafikens rorelse i ett trafiksystem best
aende av ett vagnat med tillhorande trafik. De modeller som utvecklats och studerats inom ramen
for detta avhandlingsarbete ar mikroskopiska trafiksimuleringsmodeller
vilka beskriver samspelet mellan enskilda fordon i trafiken och mellan
fordon och infrastrukturen. En mikroskopisk trafiksimuleringsmodell
best
ar av delmodeller som beskriver olika delar av forar- och fordonsbeteendet. Till exempel styrs interaktionen mellan fordon i samma
korfalt av en fordonsfoljandemodell och korfaltsbyten kontrolleras av
en korfaltsbytesmodell.
En trafiksimuleringsmodell for landsvagstrafik, RuTSim, har utvecklats inom avhandlingsarbetet. Modellen beskriver trafik p
a tv
afaltsvagar
samt motesfria landsvagar, d.v.s. vagar med vajerracke mellan motande
korfalt. RuTSim har redan kommit till praktisk nytta, bland annat for
att ta fram beslutsunderlag infor byggnationer av motesfria landsvagar.
Dagens fordon blir allt mera avancerade, utrustning s
asom adaptiva farth
allare och kollisionsvarningssystem har till exempel blivit allt
vanligare. For att sakerstalla att dessa forarstod leder till avsedda effekter, t.ex. f
orbattrad framkomlighet, trafiksakerhet eller miljo, m
aste
systemen utvarderas. Trafiksimulering mojliggor utvardering av effekter av forarstod redan i tidiga skeden av systemutvecklingen. Denna
tillampning staller dock nya krav p
a trafiksimuleringen.
Trafiksimulering for utvardering av forarstod behandlas ocks
a i avhandlingen. De krav som stalls p
a trafiksimuleringsmodeller som ska
anvandas for utvardering av trafiksakerhetseffekter av forarstod undersoks med hj
alp av RuTSim. RuTSim anvands ocks
a for analyser av
rafflor i vagmitt p
a tv
afaltsvagar, ett omkorningsstod och adaptiva farth
allare. Dessa studier visar att modelleringen av forarbeteende ar avgorande for resultaten av trafiksimuleringsbaserade analyser av forarstod.
v
Acknowledgements
This thesis is a result of research carried out at the Swedish National
Road and Transport Research Institute (VTI) and the division of Communications and Transport Systems at Linkoping University. The Swedish Road Administration has sponsored the research through the Swedish
Network of Excellence Transport Telematics Sweden.
Needless to say, this work would never have been completed without
the support of my supervisor Jan Lundgren. He has guided me through
all parts of the maze of PhD studies. I am also grateful to Pontus
Matstoms for introducing me to the field of traffic modelling and simulation and to Arne Carlsson for sharing his extensive knowledge in traffic
engineering. Thanks also to Andras Varhelyi, who has kindly read and
commented on my work.
My colleagues at VTI and the division of Communications and Transport Systems are sincerely acknowledged. They have provided both the
room for discussion and the distraction needed for successful work. My
roommate Johan Janson Olstam has become a good friend.
I would also like to thank Geertje Hegeman, Serge Hoogendoorn and
Henk van Zuylen for inviting me to come and work in their group at
Delft University of Technology. I had a really good time in Delft and
Geertjes contagious enthusiasm will stay with me for a long time.
Finally, if it wasnt for the support of my family and friends, I would
not have come this far. Last but not least, Erika, thanks for always
being there.
Norrkoping, August 2008
Andreas Tapani
vii
Contents
1 Introduction
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present thesis
Objectives . . . . .
Contributions . . .
Delimitations . . .
Summary of papers
Future research . .
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ix
Introduction
Road traffic is continuously changing in nature. New vehicle and infrastructure technology creates new traffic conditions. At the moment, Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) are becoming an increasingly important element in the traffic system. ITS can be described as telecommunications, computer and automatic control systems that interact with
the vehicles in the traffic system and provide support for a more efficient
utilisation of the available resources. Examples of ITS include applications for traffic management, traveller information, public transport,
logistics and driver assistance.
The main motivation for changes and standard improvements in the
traffic system has traditionally been to increase capacity and the qualityof-service, i. e. to allow increased speed and to reduce the time spent
queueing. Today more attention is turning towards other issues such as
road safety and the environmental impact of traffic. To remedy congestion, safety and pollution problems, it is important that the measures
taken provide real benefits. In addition, scarce resources require prioritisation among alternatives. Impact assessments of proposed changes in
the traffic system are therefore necessary. Traffic simulation models that
describe operations in a traffic system has proven to be of use for such
analyses.
ITS increase the complexity of the interactions between individual
vehicles and the surrounding traffic and between vehicles and the infrastructure. Simulation is a powerful method for studies of complex
systems. Traffic simulation is therefore likely to become more essential
in studies of all road traffic systems.
Many traffic simulation studies of the design of urban street networks
and motorway operations have been performed. The road mileage is
however in most countries dominated by rural roads (European Union
Road Federation, 2007). So far, the use of traffic simulation for rural
roads has not increased as much as the use of simulation for other road
types. Todays growing awareness of issues such as road safety and the
environment has however brought an increasing interest in the perfor1
1. INTRODUCTION
2.1
A simulation model is a mathematical representation of a dynamic system that can be used to draw conclusions about the properties of the real
system. Time is the basic independent variable of a simulation model.
In computer implementations of simulation models, the model state
is updated at discrete times. A simulation model can either apply a
time-based scanning approach, in which the model is updated at regular
intervals, or an event-based approach, in which the model is updated
at the points in time where the state of the system is changing. Eventbased updating is less computer resource demanding as the simulation
model is updated more sparsely than in a time-based model with equal
accuracy. Event-based simulation does however imply calculation of the
next change in the state of the model after each update. This procedure
becomes very complicated for complex systems including many entities
that change state frequently. Event-based simulation is consequently
more appropriate for systems of limited size and for systems in which
the entities change state infrequently. Time-based scanning is considered
to be appropriate for systems including large numbers of entities with
frequently changing states.
Simulation models may be either deterministic or stochastic. Deterministic simulation models do not include any randomness and are
therefore appropriate for systems with little or no random variation.
Stochastic simulation models make use of statistical distributions for
some of the model parameters to reproduce the variability of the real
system. The result of a model run of a stochastic model will consequently differ depending on the realisation of the random numbers that
3
macroscopic simulation models is for this reason analysis of traffic operations covering large urban areas and freeway networks. Examples of
macroscopic traffic simulation models are the Cell Transmission Model
(Daganzo, 1994, 1995) and METANET (Messmer and Papageorgiou,
1990). The macroscopic modelling approach makes it difficult to describe the consequences of elements in the traffic system that have an
impact on individual vehicles, or properties that depend on individual
vehicle behaviour. For example, studies of motorway weaving sections,
highway passing lanes and some ITS-applications are difficult to conduct
with a macroscopic model.
Microscopic simulation models consider individual driver and vehicle units in the traffic stream. During a simulation run, vehicles are
moved through the network on the paths between the vehicles origin
and destination. Interactions between individual vehicles and between
vehicles and the infrastructure are modelled during this process through
equations designed to mimic real driver behaviour. These equations are
commonly organised into sub-models that handle specific parts of the
driving task. Car-following and lane-changing models are examples of
sub-models. A car-following model controls a simulated vehicles interactions with vehicles in front in the same lane and lane-changing decisions
are governed by a lane-changing model. The most common application
of traffic micro-simulation is quality-of-service studies of specific locations in urban street or motorway networks. A majority of the microsimulation models are also developed for these road environments (ITS
Leeds, 2000). The use of traffic micro-simulation for safety assessments
and pollutant emission estimation is also explored concurrently with the
growing awareness of road safety and the environment. The potential
of traffic simulation based road safety analysis were for example investigated by Minderhoud and Bovy (2001), Barcelo et al. (2003) and Archer
(2005). The works of Liu and Tate (2004) and Panis et al. (2006) are
examples of micro-simulation based environmental impact analysis. ITS
developed to support individual vehicles in the traffic stream can also be
studied using micro-simulation. Examples of micro-simulation models
are MITSIM (Yang, 1997), VISSIM (PTV, 2008), AIMSUN (TSS, 2008)
and Paramics (Quadstone Paramics, 2008) for urban and motorway environments and TRARR (Hoban et al., 1991), TWOPAS (McLean, 1989)
and VTISim (Brodin and Carlsson, 1986) for rural road environments.
The detailed traffic description in a micro-simulation model leads to resource demanding calibration and long simulation model run times for
5
2.2
This section reviews the state-of-the-art in rural road traffic simulation. The interest in rural road traffic simulation began in the 1960s.
Among the first to attempt to simulate two-lane road traffic were Shumate and Dirksen in 1964 and Warnshuis in 1967 (McLean, 1989). These
early attempts were however limited by the computing power available
in the 1960s. The 1970s brought an increasing interest in rural road
traffic simulation. Programming languages more suitable for simulation
and more powerful computers made it possible to construct models with
the detail needed to simulate the traffic on two-lane rural roads. Since
the 1970s most modeling efforts have been focused on urban or motorway traffic. As a consequence, the current position of rural road traffic
simulation is not far from the position of the early 1980s. The recent
works of Kim and Elefteriadou (2007) and Brilon and Weiser (2006) does
however indicate the remaining relevance of two-lane road traffic simulation. The main applications of rural road traffic simulation models
have been studies of traffic conditions due to changes in road alignment,
cross-section design and traffic composition and volume.
Examples of models for rural road traffic simulation includes the
Traffic on Rural Roads (TRARR) model developed by the Australian
Road Research Board (Hoban et al., 1991), the Two-Lane Passing
(TWOPAS) model originally developed by the Midwest Research Institute (McLean, 1989) and the model developed by the Swedish National
Road and Transport Research Institute (VTISim) (Brodin and Carlsson,
1986). A recently developed model is the TWO-Lane two-way highway SIMulator (TWOSIM) presented by Kim and Elefteriadou (2007).
TWOSIM was developed specifically for capacity estimation of two-lane
roads.
The development of the TRARR, TWOPAS and VTISim models
started before fast and powerful personal computers became available.
All three of the models bear traces of the prioritising that had to be
made to run a traffic micro-simulation model using the computers of the
1970s. VTISim applies an event-based simulation approach that is very
efficient from a computer resource perspective but modeling of complex
traffic interactions is difficult. TRARR and TWOPAS are time-based
simulation models with a fixed time step of 1 s. This may be sufficient for
quality-of-service studies of two-lane roads. Kim and Elefteriadou (2007)
stated that the early models are not applicable for capacity estimation.
Moreover, new applications such as evaluation of ITS and simulation
based road safety and environmental impact assessments require a rural
7
3.1
ples of ADAS enabling technologies are laser, radar and video based
sensors and wireless communication techniques suitable for vehicle-tovehicle and vehicleinfrastructure communication. Examples of systems
based on radar and/or laser sensors include adaptive cruise control that
extends the functionality of fixed speed cruise control with car-following
distance keeping, rear-end collision warning that warns in case of potential collisions and parking aid that keeps track of adjacent vehicles
and assists during parking manoeuvres. Examples of systems based
on vehicle-to-vehicle communication are intersection collision avoidance
systems that detect potential collisions in intersections and overtaking
assistance that gives advise on overtaking opportunities on two-lane
roads. Systems that rely on communication and road network positioning are for example intelligent speed adaptation that guides drivers
towards keeping the posted speed limit and post-crash alerting that notifies the rescue service in case of an accident.
In a road safety context, Oei et al. (2002) classified ADAS according
to which phase of the accident process that the systems give support
in. Systems were determined as either pre-crash, crash or post-crash
support systems. Systems that give support during normal driving were
classified as pre-crash systems. Examples of pre-crash systems include all
of the examples given for the technology based classification except postcrash alerting which for obvious reasons is categorised as a post-crash
support system. Crash support systems are systems that pre-activate
the vehicles safety systems before an un-avoidable accident, e. g. systems
that pre-inflate airbags for maximum protection.
A functional classification of ADAS is commonly applied for studies
of driver behaviour in relation to the systems. This categorisation is
based on grouping criteria that take into account which type of driver
and which part of the driving task that the systems give support to. Michons hierarchical control model, see e. g. the review by Ranney (1994),
that divides driving into strategic, tactical and operational tasks were
for example used by Oei et al. (2002) to categorise ADAS. Strategic
driving tasks involves tasks related to navigation and route choice. Examples of systems that support strategic driving tasks are systems that
give information of conditions along the drivers desired route. Tactical driving tasks are overtaking, lane-changing, intersection negotiation
and car-following. Many ADAS support tactical driving tasks. Examples include adaptive crusie control, intelligent speed adaptation and
lane-change collision avoidance that detect vehicles in the blind spot.
10
Operational driving tasks are the basic vehicle handling. ADAS that
support operational driving tasks are for example vision enhancement
systems that support driving in poor visibility conditions and road surface monitoring systems that give information of e. g. low road friction.
Categorisation of ADAS into longitudinal and lateral control systems
is another example of a functional ADAS classification. Longitudinal
control systems include for example intelligent speed adaptation and
adaptive cruise control. Lateral control ADAS are e. g. lane-change collision avoidance and lane/road departure warning systems.
Golias et al. (2002) introduced an ADAS categorisation according
to the potential system impacts. Criteria for road safety and traffic
efficiency impacts were used to categorise a set of ADAS. Systems that
scored high on both road safety and traffic efficiency were road surface
monitoring, adaptive cruise control and lane-change collision avoidance.
An impact oriented ADAS categorisation is useful to prioritise among
ADAS and to allocate resources to the most promising alternatives.
Most research and development efforts related to ADAS have been
focused on enabling technologies and human machine interfaces. This
is natural since the driving force behind introductions of ADAS come
from vehicle manufacturers and the demand of their customers. However, from societys perspective, to increase traffic safety and to remedy congestion and pollution problems, it is important that ADAS lead
to real benefits. Scarce resources require prioritisation and as a consequence ADAS need to be evaluated already at early development stages.
Evaluation of ADAS is discussed in the following section.
3.2
To assess impacts of already well-tried measures to improve the traffic system, one can conduct before and after studies or cross-sectional
studies based on field data. Road safety analysis of traditional safety
measures can for example be conducted based on the actual accident
turn out. New technologies such as ADAS can however not be reliably
evaluated based only on field data. Even though some ADAS already
have been introduced in the traffic system, the proportion of equipped
to unequipped vehicles is still too small for conclusions to be drawn.
Instead, evaluations of ADAS have to be based on laboratory studies
and modelling.
As presented in the previous section, the driver will for the foresee11
The jam suppressing potential of ACC was also investigated by Kesting et al. (2007a, 2007b). In these studies, the same model was used for
both ACC-equipped and standard vehicles. Jam-avoiding ACC-vehicles
were modelled by modification of the model parameters. The simulation results showed that already a low proportion of jam-avoiding ACCvehicles could improve traffic performance and reduce congestion.
Effects of a co-operative following (CF) system closely related to
ACC was studied by van Arem et al. (2006). This system can be described as an ACC system based on vehicle-to-vehicle communication.
The use of inter-vehicle communication make it possible for equipped
vehicles to travel closer together than non-equipped vehicles or vehicles
equipped with a standard autonomous ACC system. The CF system
was modelled as a distance controller without reaction delay and CFvehicles were assigned a short desired following headway. The simulation
results showed that introduction of a CF system can reduce the number
of shock waves in traffic with a large proportion of CF-vehicles.
A similar CF system was studied by Liu et al. (2006). This study
considered the impact on safety caused by information delay in the CF
system. Car-following models with different reaction delays were used to
model information delay in the CF system and time-to-collision based
safety indicators were used to measure the safety effects. The results
showed that information delay had an impact on the safety indicators.
Alkim et al. (2000) studied the effects of CF and a speed control
system. The speed control system can be viewed as an Intelligent Speed
Adaptation (ISA) system which guides drivers towards keeping an appropriate speed. The simulation results for the speed control system
indicated that both speeds and the number of shock waves can be reduced when a speed control system is introduced.
Hoogendoorn and Minderhoud (2001, 2002) studied impacts of ACC
and ISA on motorway traffic. ACC was in this work modelled using a
distance controller with a short system response time. ISA was modelled by preventing ISA equipped vehicles to exceed the speed limit.
The simulation results indicated that ACC have a potential to improve
motorway bottleneck capacity. Increased variability of the bottleneck
capacity was however also observed. No effects of ISA could be established.
A traffic simulation based evaluation of ISA was also performed by
Liu and Tate (2004). ISA was in this study modelled by reducing the
speed suggested by the car-following model if this speed was higher
14
than the speed limit. The simulation results showed that ISA is more
efficient in less congested traffic. High speeds and the speed variation
was reduced by the ISA system in such conditions.
Another simulation study of ISA was presented by Hoogendoorn and
Louwerse (2005). This study focused on the potential safety effects of
ISA. ISA-equipped vehicles were assumed not to exceed the speed limit
and a constant deceleration rate was used to slow down ISA vehicles
at locations where the speed limit was lowered. The simulation results
showed that ISA reduced average speeds in the simulated road network.
It was therefore concluded that ISA can provide safety benefits.
The impact of fixed speed limiters on motorway traffic was evaluated
by Toledo et al. (2007). The speed limiters were modelled by modification of the desired speed distribution for vehicles in the simulation. The
simulation results show that speed limiters have a potential to reduce
average speeds by 10 %. The speed variability could also be reduced.
A majority of the simulation studies are concerned with traffic flow
quality-of-service and safety effects of longitudinal control ADAS, i. e.
different types of adaptive crusie control and intelligent speed adaptation
systems. Longitudinal control ADAS can be modelled straightforwardly
by modifications of the car-following model of the simulation. Changes
in driver behaviour due to the ADAS are however rarely considered in the
previous studies. Driver behaviour in ADAS equipped vehicles is crucial
for the impacts of ADAS since the driver will remain responsible for
driving his or her vehicle. There is consequently a potential to improve
traffic simulation based evaluations of ADAS by including the driver
behaviour associated with the ADAS in the applied traffic simulation
model. This potential was also recognised by Klunder et al. (2006).
Traffic simulation including driver behaviour in vehicles equipped
with ADAS will place new and additional requirements on the traffic
simulation model. ADAS functions are very diverse. A model to be
used for simulation of traffic including ADAS-equipped vehicles should
therefore allow substitution of its sub-models. The utilised sub-models
should also be flexible enough to allow modelling of the ADAS function and the observed changes in driver behaviour. Sufficiently detailed
modelling of non-equipped vehicles in the traffic stream is a requirement placed on the simulation model if traffic including a combination
of equipped and non-equipped vehicles is to be studied. Some ADAS
can be assumed to have an impact not only on the equipped vehicles
but also on neighbouring non-equipped vehicles. Quantification of such
15
effects relies on the accuracy of the modelling of the surrounding nonequipped vehicles. The simulation model should also enable derivation
of suitable performance indicators to allow use of the results for the application at hand. The basic result from a traffic micro-simulation model
run is a set of vehicle trajectories for all vehicles that have traversed the
modelled road network during the simulated time. Many indicators used
for simulation based safety and environmental impact analysis are based
on details of these resulting vehicle trajectories. A requirement imposed
on the simulation model to be used for such analysis is for this reason
access to the resulting vehicle trajectories.
16
4.1
Objectives
One main objective of this work is to develop a traffic simulation modelling framework for rural roads. The aim of this development is that the
developed model should be able to describe traffic conditions on both
single carriageway two-lane roads and on rural roads with separated oncoming traffic lanes. Traffic interrupted by vehicles entering and leaving
at intersections or roundabouts should also be considered.
There is an increasing interest in the performance of rural roads. As
described in Chapter 2, traffic micro-simulation of rural roads is less
studied than traffic simulation of other road types. There is a need for
traffic micro-simulation models that handle common types of rural roads
including the impacts of rural intersections. A traffic micro-simulation
model for rural roads should be designed to allow modelling of ITS and
traffic simulation based road safety and environmental impact analysis.
Another main objective of this work is to investigate issues in relation
to the application of traffic simulation for evaluation of ADAS. This
investigation is focused on the modelling of driver behaviour in traffic
simulations including ADAS-equipped vehicles.
The last decade has, as presented in Chapter 3, brought an interest
in the use of traffic micro-simulation to evaluate traffic system impacts
of driver assistance systems. Simulation of traffic including ADASequipped vehicles will place new and additional requirements on the
17
traffic simulation model. These requirements have not yet been thoroughly explored. Driver behavioural adaptations in relation to ADAS
can for example be expected to have important implications for the impacts of ADAS on the traffic system. A link between studies of driver
behaviour and traffic simulation based evaluations of ADAS is however
not established.
4.2
Contributions
4.3. DELIMITATIONS
4.3
Delimitations
4.4
Summary of papers
There are seven papers included in this thesis. Microscopic traffic simulation modelling of rural roads is considered in Paper IIII and the
use of traffic simulation as a tool for evaluation of ADAS is investigated
in Paper IVVII. Brief summaries of the seven papers are given in this
section. The contributions of the author of this thesis to the papers that
are written together with co-authors are also stated.
RuTSim is a time-based stochastic simulation model capable of modelling single carriageway two-lane rural roads and rural roads with separated oncoming traffic lanes. The model consist of sub-models that
handle specific tasks. The use of sub-models simplifies future modification of the model. RuTSim handles one road stretch in each simulation
run, i. e. rural road networks are not considered. The main road may incorporate intersections and roundabouts and the traffic on the main road
may be interrupted by vehicles entering the main road at intersections
located along the simulated stretch.
A verification of the RuTSim model is also included in the paper.
RuTSim was found to produce speedflow relationships for uninterrupted traffic on two-lane roads close to those of VTISim. The conclusion was therefore that RuTSim is capable of describing traffic on
Swedish two-lane rural roads. RuTSim was also found to be able to reproduce traffic flow properties on roads with separated oncoming traffic
lanes. The verification tests presented in the paper are not intended to
be a validation of the RuTSim model. Such a validation requires comparisons with empirical data. Partial validation of the RuTSim model
is performed through the work described in Paper II and III.
Paper I is published in:
Transportation Research Record 1934, 2005, pp. 169178.
The content of Paper I has been presented at:
The 84th Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board,
Washington, D.C., January 913, 2005.
An earlier version of Paper I was presented at:
Transportforum, Linkoping, January 1415, 2004.
4.5
Future research
The work presented in the papers included in this thesis give inspiration
for further research. A simulation model should be validated through
the modelling of a large number of real world systems. The RuTSim
applications presented and referred to in this thesis does only amount
to partial validation of the model. There is consequently a need for continued validation of RuTSim. A general research need is cross-validation
of traffic micro-simulation models using data sets collected in different
regions.
A need to improve RuTSims ability to handle large traffic volumes
has also been identified. Such model improvements will involve further
development of some of the sub-models of the simulation. Improved
gap-acceptance and overtaking modelling are for example needed. A
possible improvement of the intersection gap-acceptance logic is to take
drivers impatience in to account, e. g. by allowing the critical time gap
to be a function of the waiting time. Improvement of the overtaking
27
28
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