Abstract

With the emergence of connected and automated technologies, Connected Autonomous Vehicles (CAVs) are able to communicate and interact with other vehicles and signal controllers. Vehicle to Vehicle (V2V) and Vehicle to Infrastructure (V2I) communications open up an opportunity to improve routing and signal timing efficiency with additional information from CAVs, such as prior travel time and signal green time. Most of the existing research on routing and signal timing for Human Driven Vehicles (HDVs) has to face the fact that human drivers only have partial knowledge about travel costs and traffic status on the road network, which typically reduces the system efficiency. In this paper, the impacts of additional information from CAVs on routing and signal timing efficiency in terms of total travel time have been investigated. An Optimal Routing and Signal Timing (ORST) control strategy for CAVs has been proposed and compared with four existing routing and signal timing strategies where drivers have different levels of information. The results of the simulation demonstrate that with additional information from CAVs, ORST can reduce about 49% of the total travel time compared with Stochastic User Equilibrium (SUE) and about 10% of the total travel time compared with User Equilibrium (UE).

Full Text
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