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Research Note 18 1997-98

Intelligent Transport Systems

Matthew L. James
Science, Technology, Environment and Resources Group
1 December 1997

Futurama

Visitors to the 1939-40 New York World's Fair marvelled at model highways of the 1960s in which automated vehicles sped along road guide-ways. General Motors 'Futurama' presentation was the most popular Fair exhibit. It largely came true in terms of an extensive American road freeway network, but not with automatic highways and General Motors-built vehicles.

It has taken recent computer developments to reach the degree of control and sophistication required to achieve the dream. Only now are demonstration projects suggesting some of the 'driverless' highways that may eventuate in the near future. Such projects group under the broad designation of intelligent transport systems (ITS) and intelligent highway systems.

Intelligent Highway Systems (IHS)

A car industry-led development of intelligent highway systems is now underway. Earlier use of adaptive cruise control systems to maintain speed, along with use of the Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) system to determine location, have provided some impetus to recent programs.

In August 1997, people travelling along the Interstate I-95 freeway between San Diego and Los Angeles may have observed a platoon of closely spaced vehicles speeding along together. This demonstration project used magnetic guides embedded in the roadway of the high-occupancy vehicle lane to align vehicles. The cars contained computerised equipment to detect the guides, control the car and also maintain distance between other vehicles. It achieved two seconds safe distance autonomous driving. Future systems might use video-based detectors or GPS guiding.

Other proposals include:

  • driver alertness sensors and emergency transmitters
  • road visibility enhancement and reactive lighting
  • road and weather condition information, network routing, navigation and radio systems
  • surrounding vehicle detectors and collision avoidance units
  • road curvature advice and control as well as intersection accident avoidance systems
  • obstacle or pedestrian car impact protection devices
  • vehicle identification and 'black box' trip recording, and
  • 'drive by wire' cars with electronic control or invisible 'towbars' for truck fleets.

Road Pricing & Safety

One aspect of new highway automation is the ability to identify vehicles and monitor their behaviour. This allows use of electronic devices to control speed and vehicle separation and also to levy charges for road use. Road user lobbies argue against double taxing stemming from fuel levies and privacy invasion, but some systems will start soon.

The 'City Link' tollway project in Melbourne will encourage users to purchase vehicle transponders to fit on-board and allow detection by automatic toll collection units. The system may also monitor vehicle speeds, particularly in the tunnels, to fine and bill speeders as well as seek out toll evaders. Vehicle licence plate recognition systems exist to allow automatic road use pricing.

The necessity for fail-safe systems is evident when considering the potential for accidents for vehicles travelling at speed. This applies equally to congested roads as well as to cars on deserted interior highways. Automated vehicles must have the ability to detect unforseen obstacles and road conditions at all times. They must handle difficult situations in the event of vehicle or computer failure. Such abilities remain unproven.

Equally, drivers need education and expectation experience in order to properly handle IHS. They need to know when to take back control or respond to abnormal road conditions. Such events include the more obvious cases of obstacles or incidents on the roadway. However, they also include more subtle effects such as obeying signals and signs. Some IHS concepts include cars with television and Internet access. Surely these would divert attention away from road safety and add to driver complacency?

ITS concepts

While Intelligent Highway Systems (IHS) may address matters of congestion, road safety and costs, when considering the wider transport and freight logistics sectors, then links with electronic commerce concepts often prevail. Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) embrace many fields including overall fleet management, vehicle management, traveller information, electronic payment and vehicle control.

Consider the road pricing system which may monitor vehicle usage and charge for network access. It involves users, service providers, clearing operators, payment issuers and collection agents. As such, the system would require agreement between different parts of business and government sectors to ensure seamless and safe operation. As road networks become congested, perhaps there is no alternative to some form of external control, at the expense of personal freedom of movement.

Public transport ITS may include two-way voice communications for drivers and passengers, vehicle fleets management, passenger service features, fare collection and traffic priority aspects. Automatic fare collection already operates in local and overseas mass transit. Demand responsive bus systems, tele-working and high speed rail may offer incremental change. The use of electric vehicles may also facilitate new programs.

Some work has been done by the European standards committee, the Intelligent Transportation Society of America, Japanese bodies and by Australia's ITS standards group. These each consist of many organisations and programs. There is thus a risk that incompatible driver information and route guidance systems may develop in different countries.

Sceptical Futures

Nonetheless, these ideas have been long in development. The automotive and electronic industries remain sceptical as to whether the public infrastructure for IHS will materialise. Transport agencies are sceptical on whether IHS technologies will deliver solutions to real problems.

The planners' dream remains one of personal trip vehicle selection, destination specification, and safe, automatic routing at reasonable cost. An external control would choose the best route in terms of speed and congestion. This suggests a possible eventual merger between the 'private' and 'public' transport systems of today. The system would optimise transport infra-structure usage and pricing.

More futuristic views imagine energy efficient neighbourhoods linked by moving cabins of Personal Rapid Transit systems(1). Long-distance travel might occur through evacuated, underground tunnels linking distant cities. While some may scoff, the vision of Futurama has somewhat come to pass. Some cars already have GPS guidance navigation units. For now, we can hope that the trains and buses will run on time.

  1. James, M. L., 'Towards Sustainable Cities: Urban Transport and Land Use Planning', Research Paper No. 20 1995-96, Parliamentary Research Service, Department of the Parliamentary Library, Parliament of Australia, Canberra, November 30, 1995.

 

 

 

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