4.7 Article

Equilibrium modeling of mixed autonomy traffic flow based on game theory

Journal

TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART B-METHODOLOGICAL
Volume 166, Issue -, Pages 110-127

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.trb.2022.10.001

Keywords

Mixed autonomy traffic; Nash equilibrium; Automated vehicle behavior design

Funding

  1. Center for Transportation, Environment, and Community Health (CTECH) research grant Design Autonomous Vehicle Behaviors in Heterogeneous Traffic Flow, USA
  2. Hurricane Resilience Institute (HuRRI) seed grant Hurricane Evacuation Harnessing Connected and Automated Vehicles, USA

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This paper presents an equilibrium model of traffic flow with mixed autonomy based on the theory of two-player games. The study focuses on the interactions between human-driven and automated vehicles in both longitudinal and lateral dimensions. The model shows the existence of two types of Nash equilibria, one of which is always Pareto efficient. A speed policy is proposed to ensure that the realized equilibria are Pareto efficient in all traffic regimes. Two examples are provided to illustrate the applications of this model, including constructing flux functions based on behavior characteristics and considering lane policies in mixed autonomy traffic.
While much attention was paid to the interactions of human-driven and automated vehicles at the microscopic level in recent years, the understanding of the macroscopic properties of mixed autonomy traffic flow still remains limited. In this paper, we present an equilibrium model of traffic flow with mixed autonomy based on the theory of two-player games. We consider self-interested traffic agents (i.e. human-driven and automated vehicles) endowed with different speed functions and interacting with each other simultaneously in both longitudinal and lateral dimensions. We propose a two-player game model to encapsulate their interactions and characterize the equilibria the agents may reach. We show that the model admits two types of Nash equilibria, one of which is always Pareto efficient. Based on this equilibrium structure, we propose a speed policy that guarantees the realized equilibria are Pareto efficient in all traffic regimes. We present two examples to illustrate the applications of this model. In one example, we construct flux functions for mixed autonomy traffic based on behavior characteristics of agents. In the other example, we consider a lane policy and show that mixed autonomy traffic may exhibit counterintuitive behaviors even though all the agents are rational.

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