The impact of Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) on traffic-flow characteristics.

Author(s)
Arem, B. van Driel, C.J.G. & Visser, R.
Year
Abstract

Cooperative adaptive cruise control (CACC) is an extension of ACC. In addition to measuring the distance to a predecessor, a vehicle can also exchange information with a predecessor by wireless communication. This enables a vehicle to follow its predecessor at a closer distance under tighter control. This paper focuses on the impact of CACC on traffic-flow characteristics. It uses the traffic-flow simulation model MIXIC that was specially designed to study the impact of intelligent vehicles on traffic flow. The authors study the impacts of CACC for a highway-merging scenario from four to three lanes. The results show an improvement of traffic-flow stability and a slight increase in traffic-flow efficiency compared with the merging scenario without equipped vehicles. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20072387 ST [electronic version only]
Source

IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems, Vol. 7 (2006), No. 4 (December), p. 429-436, 18 ref.

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