Modeling the information flow propagation wave under vehicle-to-vehicle communications |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Civil Engineering and Industrial Design, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom;2. School of Business Administration, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, PR China;3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Kowloon, Hong Kong, PR China;1. CRAN UMR CNRS 7039, University of Lorraine, Cosnes et Romain, France;2. MACS Laboratory, National Engineering School of Gabes (ENIG), University of Gabes, Gabes, Tunisia |
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Abstract: | Vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communications under the connected vehicle context have the potential to provide new paradigms to enhance the safety, mobility and environmental sustainability of surface transportation. Understanding the information propagation characteristics in space and time is a key enabler for V2V-based traffic systems. Most existing analytical models assume instantaneous propagation of information flow through multi-hop communications. Such an assumption ignores the spatiotemporal relationships between the traffic flow dynamics and V2V communication constraints. This study proposes a macroscopic two-layer model to characterize the information flow propagation wave (IFPW). The traffic flow propagation is formulated in the lower layer as a system of partial differential equations based on the Lighthill-Whitham-Richards model. Due to their conceptual similarities, the upper layer adapts and modifies a spatial Susceptible-Infected epidemic model to describe information dissemination between V2V-equipped vehicles using integro-differential equations. A closed-form solution is derived for the IFPW speed under homogeneous conditions. The IFPW speed is numerically determined for heterogeneous conditions. Numerical experiments illustrate the impact of traffic density and market penetration of V2V-equipped vehicles on the IFPW speed. The proposed model can capture the spatiotemporal relationships between the traffic and V2V communication layers, and aid in the design of novel information propagation strategies to manage traffic conditions under V2V-based traffic systems. |
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Keywords: | Information flow propagation wave V2V communications Epidemic model Communication kernel LWR model |
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