Multiple Emergency Vehicle Priority in a Connected Vehicle Environment: A Cooperative Method
Journal article, 2024

Since emergency vehicles (EMVs) in urban transit systems play a crucial role in responding to time-critical events, the quick response of EMVs is essential for improving the success rate of rescue operations and minimizing property loss. Booming connected vehicle (CV) technology provides a new perspective to further enhance the effectiveness of EMV priority. Based on this CV technology, we propose a cooperative multiple EMV priority model in which the speed, acceleration, and lane changing actions of both the EMVs and surrounding ordinary vehicles (OVs) are set as decision variables. This proposed model is rigorously formulated in integer linear programming to maximize the EMV traffic efficiency and find a trade-off between the interference with normal traffic flows and the smoothness of the EMV driving trajectories. Two customized algorithms are developed to reduce the number of decision variables and constraints to obtain the better feasible solution in an acceptable computational time. A numerical experiment based on real-world data is proposed to further verify the utility and effectiveness of the aforementioned mathematical model. The customized algorithms achieve near-exact solutions with significantly faster computation compared to the benchmark solver. The robustness of the proposed model is tested with different parameter settings in the sensitivity analysis.

connected vehicles

Vehicle dynamics

Time factors

Mathematical models

acceleration and deceleration

Traffic control

trajectory

Roads

Emergency vehicle priority

lane-changing

Computational modeling

Trajectory optimization

Author

Peiqun Lin

South China University of Technology

Zemu Chen

South China University of Technology

Mingyang Pei

South China University of Technology

Yida Ding

Tsinghua University

Xiaobo Qu

Tsinghua University

Lingshu Zhong

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Geology and Geotechnics

IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems

1524-9050 (ISSN) 1558-0016 (eISSN)

Vol. 25 1 173-188

Subject Categories

Transport Systems and Logistics

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1109/TITS.2023.3306588

More information

Latest update

2/20/2024