Evaluation of Impacts of Adaptive Cruise Control on Mixed Traffic Flow

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Evaluation of Impacts of Adaptive Cruise Control on Mixed Traffic Flow

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2002

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American Society of Civil Engineers

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Article

Abstract

Evaluation of Impacts of Adaptive Cruise Control on Mixed Traffic Flow Abstract: This paper addresses the impacts of Adaptive (Intelligent) Cruise Control (ACC) laws on traffic flow. Semi-automated vehicles, such as ACC Vehicles, with the capability to automatically follow each other in the same lane, will coexist with manually driven vehicles on the existing roadway system before they become universal. This mixed fleet scenario creates new capacity and safety issues. In this paper, simulation results of various mixed fleet scenarios under different ACC laws are presented. Explicit comparison of two ACC laws, Constant Time Headway (CTH) and Variable Time Headway (VTH), are based on these results. It¹s found that the latter one has better performance in terms of capacity and stability of traffic. Throughput increases with the proportion of CTH vehicles when flow is below capacity conditions. But above capacity, speed variability increases and speed drops with the CTH traffic compared with manual traffic, while the VTH traffic always performs better.

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Nexus Papers;200208

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ITS Institute

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Zou, Xi and David Levinson (2002) Evaluation of Impacts of Adaptive Cruise Control on Mixed Traffic Flow. 762-779 Proceedings of International Conference on Traffic and Transportation Studies held in Guilin, China July 2002, ASCE Washington DC

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Zou, Xi; Levinson, David M. (2002). Evaluation of Impacts of Adaptive Cruise Control on Mixed Traffic Flow. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/179888.

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