Magazine Article

System Would Predictively Preempt Traffic Lights for Emergency Vehicles

TBMG-1566

10/01/2004

Abstract
Content

Two electronic communication-and- control systems have been proposed as means of modifying the switching of traffic lights to give priority to emergency vehicles. Both systems would utilize the inductive loops already installed in the streets of many municipalities to detect vehicles for timing the switching of traffic lights. The proposed systems could be used alone or to augment other automated emergency traffic-light preemption systems that are already present in some municipalities, including systems that recognize flashing lights or siren sounds or that utilize information on the positions of emergency vehicles derived from the Global Positioning System (GPS). Systems that detect flashing lights and siren sounds are limited in range, cannot “see” or “hear” well around corners, and are highly vulnerable to noise. GPS-based systems are effective in rural areas and small cities, but are often ineffective in large cities because of frequent occultation of GPS satellite signals by large structures. In contrast, the proposed traffic-loop forward prediction system would be relatively invulnerable to noise, would not be subject to significant range limitations, and would function well in large cities—even in such places as underneath bridges and in tunnels, where GPS-based systems do not work.

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Citation
"System Would Predictively Preempt Traffic Lights for Emergency Vehicles," Mobility Engineering, October 1, 2004.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Oct 1, 2004
Product Code
TBMG-1566
Content Type
Magazine Article
Language
English