Making Crosswalks Smarter: Using Sensors and Learning Algorithms to Safeguard Heterogeneous Road Users

Yunchang Zhang, Purdue University

Abstract

The research described in this dissertation began in response to frequent questions from users of several crosswalks near a university campus. At each crosswalk was a sign indicating that motorists should yield to pedestrians in the crosswalk. That this message was not being interpreted uniformly was a concern at locations where heterogeneous road users (pedestrians, cyclists, and motorists) were interacting. Instead of trying to impose a single interpretation on users of each crosswalk, it was decided to observe and analyze interactions between users of the crosswalk. Several hours of video were recorded of pedestrians and motorists “negotiating” the right of way at the crosswalk. Because these crossing locations were marked but not signalized, they were called “semi-controlled crosswalks”. The negotiations took place during what were called pedestrian-motorist interactions (PMIs). The PMIs observed on video can be characterized as a “zebra-crossing” game, as described in Chapter 4 of this dissertation. Recently, computer vision (CV) algorithms have been extensively used in road users’ detection and tracking at an unparalleled spatial-temporal scale. In this study, CV algorithms have been applied to convert the video recordings into a large-scale spatial-temporal trajectory dataset including 800 pedestrians and cyclists interacting with more than 500 vehicles. Utilizing the trajectory dataset, a spatial-temporal graph convolutional network-based sequence to sequence (ST-GCN-Seq2Seq) algorithm has been developed to reasonably forecast heterogeneous road users’ trajectories and behavior in real time. Combining CV and ST-GCN-Seq2Seq algorithms can help both design an intelligent tracking system and achieve a form of “smart” interaction at semicontrolled crosswalks for heterogeneous road users. Based on road users’ arrival patterns detected from CV algorithms, it is likely that a "smart" control strategy can minimize the delay of pedestrians and motorists at crosswalks. Therefore, another branch of this study is to investigate the “smart” control strategies at crosswalks using traffic signal controllers. A reinforcement learning framework was proposed as the “smart” control strategy, and several experiments were conducted using microsimulation. The proposed reinforcement learning framework is able to reduce traffic delay (efficiency), considering real-time pedestrian flow rates and vehicle flow rates with appropriate sensors.

Degree

Ph.D.

Advisors

Fricker, Purdue University.

Subject Area

Transportation

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