ABSTRACT

Road traffic and its impacts affect all aspects of modern life, leisure and industry, with safety, congestion and pollution being of greatest public concern. Transport planning increasingly emphasises travel demand management (TDM) and traffic calming - aided by dynamic, lower cost data from Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) - to enable real time monitoring, control and traveller information. This second edition of a highly successful work has been fully updated since its first publication in 1996 to reflect developments in technology available to the traffic analyst and in the social, ecological and economic environment. New sections are included on shockwaves, data capture without surveys, traffic incidents, delay estimation, off-line use of on-line data, environmental sensitivity, and controlled crash tests. The authors introduce and demonstrate techniques with which the analyst, engineer or planner can examine traffic problems. The underlying theme is that proper understanding of traffic systems performance and traffic problems can only come from the intelligent processing, refinement, appraisal and evaluation of traffic data. Arranged in five parts, the book offers an integrated approach to tackling road traffic problems: ¢ How to gain information and understanding about traffic ¢ The theories of traffic flow ¢ The principles of good survey planning and management ¢ Specific types of traffic studies ¢ Analytical techniques for transforming raw data into useful information. Understanding Traffic Systems provides cogent insights into the techniques of traffic data collection and analysis, the application of traffic theory and the role of data in analysis and decision making. Its breadth and use of examples from several countries make it a useful reference text for students and researchers, as well as an essential tool for practising traffic engineers and planners.

part |2 pages

Part A: INTRODUCTION

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction and context

chapter 2|22 pages

The traffic analysis process

part |2 pages

Part B: BASIC TRAFFIC THEORY

chapter 3|30 pages

Basic traffic flow theory

chapter 4|38 pages

Theories of interrupted traffic flow

chapter 5|26 pages

Theories of area-wide traffic flow

part |2 pages

Part C: DATA CAPTURE

chapter 7|16 pages

Experimental design and sample theory

chapter 9|26 pages

Traffic condition data

chapter 10|22 pages

Environmental impacts

part |2 pages

Part D: TRAFFIC STUDIES

chapter 11|24 pages

Intersection studies

chapter 12|22 pages

Origin-destination and route choice studies

chapter 13|28 pages

Traffic generation and parking studies

chapter 14|10 pages

Road safety studies

part |2 pages

Part E: DATA ANALYSIS AND MODELLING

chapter 15|32 pages

From data to information

chapter 16|34 pages

Statistical analysis

chapter 17|36 pages

Statistical modelling