4th International ICST Conference on Simulation Tools and Techniques

Research Article

From GIS to Mixed Traffic Simulation in Urban Scenarios

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/icst.simutools.2011.245680,
        author={J\o{}rg  Dallmeyer and Andreas D.  Lattner and Ingo J.  Timm},
        title={From GIS to Mixed Traffic Simulation in Urban Scenarios},
        proceedings={4th International ICST Conference on Simulation Tools and Techniques},
        publisher={ICST},
        proceedings_a={SIMUTOOLS},
        year={2012},
        month={4},
        keywords={Traffic Simulation Urban Scenarios GIS},
        doi={10.4108/icst.simutools.2011.245680}
    }
    
  • Jörg Dallmeyer
    Andreas D. Lattner
    Ingo J. Timm
    Year: 2012
    From GIS to Mixed Traffic Simulation in Urban Scenarios
    SIMUTOOLS
    ICST
    DOI: 10.4108/icst.simutools.2011.245680
Jörg Dallmeyer1,*, Andreas D. Lattner1, Ingo J. Timm2
  • 1: Information Systems and Simulation, Goethe University Frankfurt, POB 111932 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
  • 2: Information Systems and Simulation, Goethe University Frankfurt, POB Business Informatics I, University of Trier 54296 Trier
*Contact email: dallmeyer@informatik.uni-frankfurt.d

Abstract

Simulations are widely used for modeling, analysis, planning, and optimisation of traffic flows and phenomena. For realistic traffic simulations within urban scenarios, the following tasks have to be solved: (1) modeling of the road structure; (2) specification of the behaviour on the road. In our days, very detailed road models for almost any major city exist in Geographic Information Systems (GIS). In the last two decades, the Nagel-Schreckenberg model (NaSch) has been established as de facto standard for car behaviour in freeway traffic due to its efficient and realistic simulations. Within urban scenarios, NaSch lacks of flexibility to integrate heterogeneous road users like cars and bicycles. The tasks mentioned before are addressed in this paper, i.e., we propose an approach for modeling and specification of urban mixed traffic simulations. As a first step (1), an extended graph as basis for traffic simulation has to be designed. For a concrete scenario, it will be automatically generated on basis of OpenStreetmap cartographical material. The specification of road user behaviour (2) has been influenced by the NaSch model. However, the model has been extended to cover the lack of NaSch in urban scenarios: A non cell-based approach is chosen for traffic movement. Furthermore, the routing of traffic users is based on either probability or A* based routing. In this paper, details on the modeling and specification are presented and experimental results are provided