Abstract

The use of probe vehicles in traffic management is growing rapidly. The reason is that the required data collection infrastructure is increasingly in place in urban areas with a significant number of mobile sensors constantly moving and covering expansive areas of the road network. In many cases, the data is sparse in time and location and includes only geo-location and timestamp. Extracting paths taken by the vehicles from such sparse data is an important step towards travel time estimation and is referred to as the map-matching and path inference problem. This paper introduces a path inference method for low-frequency floating car data, assesses its performance, and compares it to recent methods using a set of ground truth data.

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