4.7 Article

An Aggregation Approach to Short-Term Traffic Flow Prediction

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TITS.2008.2011693

Keywords

Autoregressive moving average (ARIMA) model; data aggregation (DA); exponential smoothing (ES); moving average (MA); neural network (NN); time series; traffic flow prediction

Funding

  1. Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China [HKU 7176/07E]
  2. University of Hong Kong [10207394]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation ofChina [50578064, 70629001]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province, China [06025219]
  5. National Basic Research Program of China [2006CB705500]

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In this paper, an aggregation approach is proposed for traffic flow prediction that is based on the moving average (MA), exponential smoothing (ES), autoregressive MA (ARIMA), and neural network (NN) models. The aggregation approach assembles information from relevant time series. The source time series is the traffic flow volume that is collected 24 h/day over several years. The three relevant time series are a weekly similarity time series, a daily similarity time series, and an hourly time series, which can be directly generated from the source time series. The MA, ES, and ARIMA models are selected to give predictions of the three relevant time series. The predictions that result from the different, models are used as the basis of the NN in the aggregation stage. The output of the trained NN serves as the final prediction. To assess the performance of the different models, the naive, ARIMA, nonparametric regression, NN, and data aggregation (DA) models are applied to the prediction of a real vehicle traffic flow, from which data have been collected at a data-collection point that is located on National Highway 107, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China. The outcome suggests that the DA model obtains a more accurate forecast than any individual model alone. The aggregation strategy can offer substantial benefits in terms of improving operational forecasting.

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