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A multi-agent architecture for cooperative inter-jurisdictional traffic congestion management
Authors:Filippo Logi  Stephen G Ritchie  
Institution:1. ACCESS Linnaeus Centre & Department of Automatic Control KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden;1. Faculty of Medicine, University of Montréal, Montréal, QC, Canada;2. Pediatric Palliative Care Service, CHU Ste-Justine, Montréal, QC, Canada;3. Hemato-Oncology Service, CHU Ste-Justine, Montréal, QC, Canada;4. Pediatric Surgery Service, CHU Ste-Justine, Montréal, QC, Canada
Abstract:This paper describes , an innovative multi-agent architecture for the provision of real-time decision support to Traffic Operations Center personnel for coordinated, inter-jurisdictional traffic congestion management on freeway and surface street (arterial) networks. is composed of two interacting knowledge-based systems that perform cooperative reasoning and resolve conflicts, for the analysis of non-recurring congestion and the on-line formulation of integrated control plans. The two agents support incident management operations for a freeway and an adjacent arterial subnetwork and interact with human operators, determining control recommendations in response to the occurrence of incidents. The multi-decision maker approach adopted by reflects the spatial and administrative organization of traffic management agencies in US cities, providing a cooperative solution that exploits the agencies’ willingness to cooperate and unify their problem-solving capabilities, yet preserves the different levels of authority and the inherent distribution of data and expertise. The interaction between the agents is based on the functionally accurate, cooperative paradigm, a distributed problem solving approach aimed at producing consistent solutions without requiring the agents to have shared access to all globally available information. The cornerstone of this approach is the assumption that effective solutions can be efficiently obtained even when complete and up-to-date information is not directly available to the agents, thus reducing the need for complex data communication networks and synchronization time delays. The simulation-based evaluation of the system performance validates this assumption. The paper focuses on the distributed architecture of the agents and on their communication and decision making characteristics.
Keywords:Incident management  Decision support  Distributed problem solving  Functionally accurate cooperation  Traffic control
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