Capacity Analysis for Dynamic Bottlenecks and Alternative Concepts for Coordinated Ramp Metering Operations Status: CompleteReport Date: 06/26/2002 Summary: This project involved a detailed review of coordinated metering algorithms currently operating in the United States and a simulation analysis to examine the performance of three algorithms that represent each coordination approach; the Denver incremental coordination, the Seattle Fuzzy metering, and the Minnesota explicit section-wide coordination approaches. Researchers used a macroscopic simulation model with the same geometry and traffic demand conditions. Based on the analysis results, they developed alternative metering approaches by combining conventional zone-wide control with fuzzy coordination. They also developed two new alternative procedures to estimate bottleneck capacities in real time; an adaptive estimation method using Kaman Filter and a neural-network based approach that predicts traffic volume for a given mainline location using traffic data collected from upstream and downstream detectors. Both approaches were tested with the real data collected from the sample freeway sites. The preliminary test for alternative strategies using simulation with an example freeway in Minnesota showed promising results in terms of reducing congestion and increasing throughput on the mainline. Further testing and research is recommended. Final Deliverables: Capacity Analysis for Dynamic Bottlenecks and Alternative Concepts for Coordinated Ramp Metering Operations (Report #2002-09) Related Materials: Related Research: