WO2018142194A1 - Système et procédés d'intégration pour appliquer un équilibrage de charge de trafic- de ville dynamique prédictif et un contrôle commande de stationnement prédictif qui peut en outre contribuer à une sécurité routière coopérative - Google Patents

Système et procédés d'intégration pour appliquer un équilibrage de charge de trafic- de ville dynamique prédictif et un contrôle commande de stationnement prédictif qui peut en outre contribuer à une sécurité routière coopérative Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2018142194A1
WO2018142194A1 PCT/IB2017/053995 IB2017053995W WO2018142194A1 WO 2018142194 A1 WO2018142194 A1 WO 2018142194A1 IB 2017053995 W IB2017053995 W IB 2017053995W WO 2018142194 A1 WO2018142194 A1 WO 2018142194A1
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WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
traffic
path
trips
paths
controlled trips
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PCT/IB2017/053995
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English (en)
Inventor
Yosef Mintz
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Yosef Mintz
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
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Publication date
Application filed by Yosef Mintz filed Critical Yosef Mintz
Priority to CA3052234A priority Critical patent/CA3052234A1/fr
Priority to SG11201907082SA priority patent/SG11201907082SA/en
Priority to US16/482,797 priority patent/US20200234582A1/en
Priority to AU2017396987A priority patent/AU2017396987A1/en
Publication of WO2018142194A1 publication Critical patent/WO2018142194A1/fr
Priority to IL268399A priority patent/IL268399A/en

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Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G07CHECKING-DEVICES
    • G07BTICKET-ISSUING APPARATUS; FARE-REGISTERING APPARATUS; FRANKING APPARATUS
    • G07B15/00Arrangements or apparatus for collecting fares, tolls or entrance fees at one or more control points
    • G07B15/06Arrangements for road pricing or congestion charging of vehicles or vehicle users, e.g. automatic toll systems
    • G07B15/063Arrangements for road pricing or congestion charging of vehicles or vehicle users, e.g. automatic toll systems using wireless information transmission between the vehicle and a fixed station
    • GPHYSICS
    • G08SIGNALLING
    • G08GTRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS
    • G08G1/00Traffic control systems for road vehicles
    • G08G1/09Arrangements for giving variable traffic instructions
    • G08G1/0962Arrangements for giving variable traffic instructions having an indicator mounted inside the vehicle, e.g. giving voice messages
    • G08G1/0968Systems involving transmission of navigation instructions to the vehicle

Definitions

  • Fig. la schematically illustrates top level system data flow to apply predictive traffic load balancing control according to some embodiments.
  • Fig. lb schematically illustrates top level system data flow to apply predictive traffic load balancing control according to some embodiments, wherein Fig. lb differs from Fig. la, for example, at least by enabling vehicles to communicate directly with the path planning layer.
  • Fig.lc schematically illustrates top level system data flow to apply predictive traffic load balancing control according to some embodiments.
  • Fig. Id schematically illustrates top level system data flow to apply predictive traffic load balancing control according to some embodiments, wherein Fig. Id differs from Fig.lc, for example, at least by enabling vehicles to communicate separately with the usage condition layer, using a dedicated transmitter for such purpose, for example, a toll charging unit radio transmitter.
  • Fig.le schematically illustrates top level system data flow to apply predictive traffic load balancing control according to some embodiments, wherein fig.le differs from fig. ld and/or fig.le, for example, at least by ignoring the communication apparatus.
  • Fig. If expands according to some embodiments the system described by fig. le with driving navigation aid which is served by a predictive traffic load balancing control system.
  • Fig.lg schematically illustrates top level system data flow to apply predictive traffic load balancing control according to some embodiments, wherein fig. lg differs from fig. If, for example, at least by enabling direct updates of time related positions associated with path controlled trips to be transmitted from vehicles to one or more layers and which said updates serve according to some embodiments the need for such data to be used by the traffic prediction layer and by the paths planning layer for their ongoing operation.
  • Fig.lh schematically illustrates top level system data flow to apply predictive traffic load balancing control according to some embodiments, wherein fig. lh differs from fig. lg, for example, at least by enabling to feed traffic predictions from a path control system to a traffic light control optimization system enabling to improve according to some embodiments traffic lights control in forward time intervals covered by the predicted flows.
  • Fig.l schematically illustrates vehicular apparatus and methods to apply according to some embodiments interaction of a vehicle with a predictive traffic load balancing control system.
  • Fig.li2 illustrates schematically a toll charging unit and its interaction with in-vehicle Driving Navigation Aids (DNA) and a predictive traffic load balancing control system.
  • DNA in-vehicle Driving Navigation Aids
  • Fig.li3 illustrates schematically expanded configuration of vehicular apparatus described with fig. li2, enabling to support privileges to cooperative safe driving.
  • Fig.li3a illustrates schematically the sensing, communication and fusion functionalities involved with cooperative mapping of relative distances between a vehicle and other vehicles.
  • Fig.lj 1 up to fig. lj 3 illustrate schematically embodiments for the coordination of path controlled trips preferably applied with a basic paths planning layer.
  • Fig.lj 4 and Fig. lj 5 illustrate schematically basic traffic prediction layer with respect to different embodiments in which some of them apply mapping of demand of trips as described in fig.lj4.
  • Fig.2 is a schematic illustration of a product of manufacture, in accordance with some demonstrative embodiments.
  • Fig.3 a schematically illustrates integration of a partially certified commercial driving navigation system with a path control system, enabling authentication of a request for path controlled trip may be authenticated to prevent hostile attack of anonymous requests.
  • Fig.3b schematically illustrates integration of a certified commercial driving navigation system with a path control system, enabling authentication of a request for path controlled trip may be authenticated to prevent hostile attack of anonymous requests.
  • Fig.3b schematically illustrates integration of a certified and partially certified commercial driving navigation systems with a path control system, enabling authentication of a request for path controlled trip may be authenticated to prevent hostile attack of anonymous requests.
  • Fig.3il corresponds to Fig. lil wherein the toll charging unit is expanded to enable control on a certified driving navigation aid by a driving navigation system service or by a path control system.
  • Fig.3i2 corresponds to Fig. li2 wherein the toll charging unit is expanded to enable control on a certified driving navigation aid by a driving navigation system service or by a path control system.
  • Fig.3i3 corresponds to Fig. Ii3 wherein the toll charging unit is expanded to enable control on a certified driving navigation aid by a driving navigation system service or by a path control system.
  • Figure 4 illustrates schematically an in-vehicle unit comprising toll and optionally fine charging and credit management software functionalities with a DNA software functionality on an OEM Smartphone platform wherein an in-vehicle infotainment system provides the user-interface functionality.
  • Fig 4i2 illustrates schematically an in-vehicle unit wherein a personal Smartphone provides the user interface functionality substituting the in-vehicle infotainment system associated with fig.4il. DETAILED DESCRIPTION
  • Discussions herein utilizing terms such as, for example, “processing”, “computing”, “calculating”, “determining”, “establishing”, “analyzing”, “checking”, or the like, may refer to operation(s) and/or process(es) of a computer, a computing platform, a computing system, or other electronic computing device, that manipulate and/or transform data represented as physical (e.g., electronic) quantities within the computer' s registers and/or memories into other data similarly represented as physical quantities within the computer's registers and/or memories or other information storage medium that may store instructions to perform operations and/or processes.
  • processing may refer to operation(s) and/or process(es) of a computer, a computing platform, a computing system, or other electronic computing device, that manipulate and/or transform data represented as physical (e.g., electronic) quantities within the computer' s registers and/or memories into other data similarly represented as physical quantities within the computer's registers and/or memories or other information storage medium that may store instructions to perform operations and/or processes.
  • plural and “a plurality”, as used herein, include, for example, “multiple” or “two or more”.
  • a plurality of items includes two or more items.
  • references to "one embodiment”, “an embodiment”, “demonstrative embodiment”, “various embodiments” etc. indicate that the embodiment(s) so described may include a particular feature, structure, or characteristic, but not every embodiment necessarily includes the particular feature, structure, or characteristic. Further, repeated use of the phrase “in one embodiment” does not necessarily refer to the same embodiment, although it may.
  • a communication unit which is capable of communicating a communication signal, may include a transmitter to transmit the communication signal to at least one other communication unit, and/or a communication receiver to receive the communication signal from at least one other communication unit.
  • the verb communicating may be used to refer to the action of transmitting or the action of receiving.
  • the phrase "communicating a signal” may refer to the action of transmitting the signal by a first device, and may not necessarily include the action of receiving the signal by a second device.
  • the phrase "communicating a signal” may refer to the action of receiving the signal by a first device, and may not necessarily include the action of transmitting the signal by a second device.
  • the communication signal may be transmitted and/or received, for example, in the form of Radio Frequency (RF) communication signals, and/or any other type of signal.
  • RF Radio Frequency
  • circuitry may refer to, be part of, or include, an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC), an integrated circuit, an electronic circuit, a processor (shared, dedicated, or group), and/or memory (shared, dedicated, or group), that execute one or more software or firmware programs, a combinational logic circuit, and/or other suitable hardware components that provide the described functionality.
  • ASIC Application Specific Integrated Circuit
  • the circuitry may be implemented in, or functions associated with the circuitry may be implemented by, one or more software or firmware modules.
  • circuitry may include logic, at least partially operable in hardware.
  • logic may refer, for example, to computing logic embedded in circuitry of a computing apparatus and/or computing logic stored in a memory of a computing apparatus.
  • the logic may be accessible by a processor of the computing apparatus to execute the computing logic to perform computing functions and/or operations.
  • logic may be embedded in various types of memory and/or firmware, e.g., silicon blocks of various chips and/or processors.
  • Logic may be included in, and/or implemented as part of, various circuitry, e.g. radio circuitry, receiver circuitry, control circuitry, transmitter circuitry, transceiver circuitry, processor circuitry, and/or the like.
  • logic may be embedded in volatile memory and/or non-volatile memory, including random access memory, read only memory, programmable memory, magnetic memory, flash memory, persistent memory, and the like.
  • Logic may be executed by one or more processors using memory, e.g., registers, stuck, buffers, and/or the like, coupled to the one or more processors, e.g., as necessary to execute the logic.
  • an apparatus, a device and/or a system including means for triggering, causing, controlling, and/or performing one or more, e.g., some or all, of the operations of the method.
  • an apparatus, a device and/or a system may include one or more components, modules and/or units, for example, including circuitry and/or logic, configured to trigger, cause, control, and/or perform one or more, e.g., some or all, of the operations of the method.
  • Some demonstrative embodiments described herein may be implemented by apparatuses, systems and/or methods applying an innovative non-discriminating and anonymous car related navigation driven traffic model predictive control, producing predictive load-balancing on road networks which dynamically assigns efficient sets of routes to car related navigation aids and/or which navigation aids may refer to in dash navigation or to smart phone navigation application.
  • Some demonstrative embodiments described herein may be implemented to enable, for example, to improve or to substitute commercial navigation service solutions, applying under such upgrade or substitution a new highly efficient proactive traffic control for city size or metropolitan size traffic.
  • Some demonstrative embodiments described herein may refers to innovative solutions provided to issues such as, for example, but not limited to, encouragement of usage of controlled trips on road networks by robust privacy preserving free of charge or privileged GNSS tolling which hides trip details from a toll charging center (privacy preservation at a level which disables any potential big brother syndrome) and which further enables to optimize network load balancing by demand control, robust real time calibration of DTA for city wide controllable traffic-predictions associated with predictive load balancing control, regional evacuation/dilution of traffic under emergency situations, support to cooperative multi-destination trips, static and dynamic differentiation between part of networks which may and which may not be used to balance city wide traffic, enabling tolerated advertisement provision to encourage public -private collaboration under control on negative effects of advertisement provision on predictive traffic load balancing, disabling hostile attacks under anonymously operated controlled trips, disabling direct and indirect association of anonymously controlled trips with identities of vehicles.
  • Some demonstrative embodiments described herein may be implemented, for example, to contribute to robust and less costly cooperative safe driving on road networks, which are expected to be a major issue with autonomous vehicles, as well as contributing to preparation of conditions to prevent, in due course, from non-coordinated mass usage of navigation dependent autonomous vehicles to become counterproductive to both the overall traffic and the users of autonomous vehicles.
  • ITS Intelligent Transportation Systems
  • C- ITS Cooperative ITS
  • Potential benefits from a system that may cope with the above mentioned issues although expected to be high, are not unambiguous and depend on concrete interrelation between time and zones dependent demand of trips and the network supply potential, wherein the way to determine potential benefits is by computer simulation for a concrete city.
  • Such benefits may include but not be limited to a) value of travel time savings determined according to transportation economics criteria for investments of the public sector in transportation related projects, b) reduction in polluting emissions and c) reduction in risk associated with exposure to potential incidents.
  • Indication about the potential benefits may be obtained by computer simulations applying a simple control model which includes traffic predictions by Dynamic Traffic Assignment (DTA) according to current and predicted non-coordinated controlled routes, and non-controlled model based routes, wherein non-coordinated controlled routes are limited to few up to ten percent in order not to make interrelated interference of non-coordinated trips to be dominant, and wherein independent simultaneous planning of routes are applied frequently according to feedback from the DTA simulator which is fed by prior planned controlled routes and non controlled model based routes.
  • DTA Dynamic Traffic Assignment
  • Some idea about the reason for the non-applicability of said simple control model may be provided by mentioning two feasibility issues: a) lack of an ability to apply robust traffic predictions by a stochastic and simplified route-choice model associated with a DTA, and b) lack of ability to apply acceptable calibration of a stochastic, non-linear and time varying DTA for a city wide network - by joint/dual estimation of high dimension demand and parameters of DTA models - while most or even major part of the traffic is modeled.
  • Some embodiments may be configured to provide feasible solution to one or more or to all elements of above mentioned issues and/or to provide additional features and/or benefits and//or alternatives and/or improvements to respective systems and methods which exist or will be existing in the future.
  • the embodiments describe methods, apparatus and/or systems that may enable high utilization of road networks (hereinafter the term network refers to a road network if not mentioned otherwise), using control on paths of trips with the aim to resolve above mentioned issues and some other issues mentioned further along with the described embodiments.
  • network refers to a road network if not mentioned otherwise
  • path refers to a route on a road network and both terms, path and route, may be used interchangeably and may include lanes on roads as well.
  • control on paths may be applied as an independent service or as an upgrade to available centralized navigation system service that calculates routes for driving navigation aids according to requests fed to driving navigation aids and transmits routes assigned to driving navigation aids.
  • a driving navigation aid may refer to a means of navigation for driving, enabling to guide either a driver or a means of navigation for driving enabling to guide an autonomous vehicle, according to a route on a road network, wherein, a driving navigation aid may refer to the term DNA as an abbreviation.
  • a DNA may be a satellite based driving navigation aid used to guide drivers, in which the position of the vehicle along a trip is determined indirectly for, or directly by, received signals from a GNSS, and/or according to sensor(s) associated with an autonomous vehicle enabling vehicle localization on a high resolution map.
  • a centralized approach may be needed in order to enable a highly demanding control to coordinate substantially paths on the network by a plurality of refining phases (which may refer to control cycles), whereas remote calculation of paths by driving navigation aids (non centralized calculations), may limit the control refining phases. With such approach a long time phase may reduce the efficiency of the control on trip paths and may even make the control non efficient.
  • the methods, apparatus and/or systems that enable to apply said control approach on paths for trips should preferably use model predictive control targeting mainly urban areas in which there are multiple alternatives to distribute flows on a road network according to traffic demand.
  • the potential improvement in flow that can be achieved from such an approach depends not just on the efficiency of the method applying the control on trip paths but also depends on the size and the topology of the networks in relation with zone to zone trip demand, which determine the degrees of freedom on the network.
  • Apparatus and method to apply control which efficiently may coordinate paths on the network, should preferably use predictive control requiring simulation runs applying traffic models in order to enable controllable traffic predictions.
  • a prediction based on traffic simulation include in addition to traffic models related effects also effects of controlled set of planned paths, performed in a prior control cycle (which may refer hereinafter also to a control phase) or a sub-cycle (which may refer hereinafter also to a sub-phase), provides feedback to refine a set of planned paths by a subsequent control cycle or a sub- cycle.
  • simulated traffic flow predictions based on realistic models including but not limited to statistical, physical, behavioral models, as well as traditional control such as traffic lights control plans, are used as a platform for controllable traffic predictions to support a predictive control which should dynamically coordinates routes associated with trips.
  • the result of the coordination tends to balance the traffic load on the network., and which coordination is preferably applied through DNAs used either by drivers or by autonomous vehicles.
  • the method, the functionality of apparatus and/or system that apply predictive control on paths of controlled trips according to traffic model based simulated predictions in a finite time horizon, preferably the control applies coordinate paths to path-controlled trips may be divided into system layers which are elaborated with further description of embodiments of the present invention.
  • a system that applies such control may refer hereinafter to a path control system applying predictive path control to controlled trips.
  • path control refers to predictive path control in terms of model predictive control which is applied by a path control system, and which system is preferably aimed at coordinating path controlled trips on the network in order to generate and maintain traffic load balancing on a network under objective constraints (e.g., road network, traffic conditions, behavior of drivers and traffic lights/signals) and subjective constraints (e.g., fairness in assignment of routes to trips).
  • objective constraints e.g., road network, traffic conditions, behavior of drivers and traffic lights/signals
  • subjective constraints e.g., fairness in assignment of routes to trips.
  • the term preferably was used with respect to coordination of path controlled trips, by path control, due to a need to distinguish between conditions on the network which require special coordination processes, in addition to feedback about anticipated effects of paths on the network, and conditions for which special coordination might be redundant.
  • Conditions that need coordination may be characterized by a possibility that non-coordinated paths of trips may cause, at an extreme case, local traffic congestion and, at a non-extreme case, interferences which slowdown traffic flows.
  • Example for an extreme case is high percentage of path controlled trips usage on the network.
  • An example for a non-extreme case is low percentage of path controlled trips usage on the network wherein such percentage may still be a cause for local slowdowns in the traffic flow, if coordination is not applied with path controlled trips.
  • path control may also refer to non coordinated planning of paths for path controlled trips, while still using controlled predictions as feedback for further non coordinated planning of path controlled trips.
  • the path control enables to correct paths of path-controlled trips according to feedback from a controlled prediction that includes the effect of non coordinated planned paths performed with a prior path control cycle.
  • path control may refer to coordinating or to non-coordinating path control while, by default, coordinating path control should preferably be applied to produce path controlled trips that tend to be converged to coordinated paths by coordinating path control, wherein under non-feasible full control it may at best produce substantially coordinated trips.
  • Dynamic assignment of paths for a path-controlled trip, under coordinating path control reflect from a point of view of a vehicle the effect of ongoing control which tends to coordinate controlled trips on the network according to current traffic and controlled traffic predictions.
  • robustness of feedback from controlled prediction performed by traffic models - which increases with the increase of the percentage of path controlled trips usage in the traffic - leads to preferably apply coordinating path control under incentives provided for usage of path-controlled trips by drivers and/or autonomously driven vehicles.
  • higher benefit from improved traffic due to a more controllable and more robust control, is obtained.
  • Coordination of path controlled trips may be considered to some extent as cooperative coordination and further in this respect coordination of path controlled trips may refer also to cooperative path control or to coordinating path control.
  • the term - cooperative - may refer in this respect to participation of vehicles in an operation applying path control and which cooperation means obedience of drivers or autonomous vehicles to path controlled trips applied through driving navigation aids.
  • autonomous vehicles - cooperative path control - may apply more robust cooperative path controlled trips as further described.
  • robust cooperative path controlled trips may be expanded to include inter- alia activation of cooperative safe driving by, for example, acceptably safe autonomous vehicles.
  • a cooperative operation may in general refer to an operation enabling high utilization of the network capacity and/or safe driving on a network, and which cooperative operation is preferably supported by providing incentives to encourage participation in the cooperative operation.
  • Incentives may preferably be applied at the lowest expense under regulation in order to encourage efficient and safe driving while preserving the possibility of non-cooperative driving to still be allowable.
  • the efficiency level and the safety level may be achieved by a potential implementation which is open to market competition. For example, this may be enabled under regulation of regional road tolling, applying free of charge toll or toll discount as a privilege by authorities to encourage a cooperative operation such as coordinating path control service, while the open market competition can be applied through a non government operator as a coordinating path control service on behalf of an authority.
  • the operator can be a commercial entity, which is expected to provide the most effective solution, applying an operation based, for example, on economically justified benefits from a path control system that can be recognized by authorities.
  • a recognized and measurable benefit is "value of travel time" which can be proved by computer simulation to be saved on the network by the service, and which can be evaluated for example according to the difference between simulation of aggregated trip times on the network before and after activation of path control.
  • a service provided by a commercial entity may be obtained with time limited exclusive rights in order to leave further competition open to new technological developments.
  • a path control system may be applied for example by the following described breakdown of a path control system into system layers.
  • a system layer which may generate conditions to apply highly efficient path control is the usage condition layer, which prepares conditions for high usage of driving navigation aids (means) on a network, and which may enable high utilization of freedom degrees on the network by applying predictive control for coordination of paths associated with trips.
  • the usage condition layer which prepares conditions for high usage of driving navigation aids (means) on a network, and which may enable high utilization of freedom degrees on the network by applying predictive control for coordination of paths associated with trips.
  • Such usage condition layer applies incentives to usage of coordinating navigation aids providing path controlled trips, under coordinating path control, to drivers and/or to navigation dependent autonomously driven vehicles.
  • conditions are prepared for robust traffic model based predictions, and further for highly efficient coordinating path control, applying model predictive control that uses traffic model based controllable predictions.
  • high usage of navigation aids (means) on the network, supported by path control applying predictive coordination of path controlled trips, may enable substantially full control or at least control on a major part of trips on a network.
  • Predictive coordination in this respect may refer to coordinating path control based on model predictive control.
  • the effect of high usage conditions, generated by the usage condition layer, has a major positive effect on all layers that may preferably support highly efficient and robust path controlled trips as highlighted hereinafter.
  • Another system layer which is the traffic mapping layer, is the first layer which utilizes the benefit of high usage of path controlled trips generated by the usage condition layer, enabling the traffic mapping layer to receive position related data generated, preferably anonymously, by high usage of navigation aids.
  • high quality traffic information (e.g., flow related) at high coverage can be constructed by the traffic mapping layer according to dynamic positions of vehicles.
  • Further utilization ability may refer to construction of highly accurate information about demand of trips according to destinations that are originally fed to driving navigation aids in order to get route (path) for guidance along a trip.
  • a traffic prediction layer may according to some embodiments calibrate at a robust level models used by a dynamic -traffic simulation platform to apply further high quality controllable traffic predictions by the traffic prediction system layer supporting a paths planning system layer which produces by default sets of paths that tend to be converged to coordinated paths under coordinating path control supported by high usage of path controlled trips generated for example by the usage condition layer.
  • Usage condition layer may refer to a system, methods and apparatus which enable to encourage usage of path controlled trips, and possibly usage of vehicle related functionalities which enable safe driving, or increase the level of safe driving, as well as the use of autonomous vehicles using path controlled trips at a stage in which preferably classification level 4 or possibly level 5, determined by the Society of Automotive Engineers, is acceptably safe. Encouraging usage of safe autonomous vehicles which are using path-controlled trips may have a benefit that is beyond encouraging safe driving by safe autonomous vehicles that use driving navigation aids which can be supported by path control trips.
  • encouraging usage of such autonomous vehicles may have the benefit of reducing the level of non predictive (stochastic) behavior of the traffic on the network and to reduce further the stochastic level of traffic predictions, according to some embodiments, by using traffic predictions based on a traffic simulation in which not just the route choice model of drivers is substituted by path controlled trips, but also driving behavior model(s) of drivers are substituted by predictive driving behavior models of autonomous vehicles including predictive driving interaction models of autonomous vehicles with static and dynamic objects. Further benefits to encourage usage of acceptably safe autonomous vehicles are described with further description of the invention in different places.
  • the usage condition layer applies said encouragement by providing incentives with a road toll charging approach, enabling to provide either free of charge toll or toll discount to vehicles to encourage efficient use of a road network and/or more safe driving.
  • a toll charging center applying tolling and privileged tolling) interacts with:
  • in-vehicles toll charging units a unit associated with a vehicle
  • a car plate identification system for inspection, using for example Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR), while enabling discrimination between vehicles which are entitled and vehicles which are not entitled to privileges.
  • ANPR Automatic Number Plate Recognition
  • encouraging usage of path controlled trips and/or safe driving by in-vehicle functionalities and/or acceptably safe autonomous vehicles is preferably applied by robust privacy preservation of trip details while providing free of charge road toll or toll discount using apparatus and methods described further in more details with described embodiment of the invention.
  • Privacy preserving toll, under provision of privileges, may reduce in general a major obstacle which may be involved with applying road toll, especially with implementation of GNSS based road tolling concept which tracks positions of vehicles in order to manage entitlement for privileges.
  • applying robust privacy preservation may facilitate acceptance of a concept applying free of charge road toll, and in more advanced stages possibly toll discount, as privilege to encourage usage of path-controlled trips.
  • robust privacy preservation refers to in-vehicle apparatus and processes to calculate the amount of toll to be charged according to in-vehicle tracked trip, and according to in-vehicle privileges management to certify entitlement for privilege by communicating with a toll charging center, which communication enables to hide details of tracked trips from a toll charging center.
  • Toll charging center may refer to usage condition layer and both terms, toll charging center and usage condition layer, may be used hereinafter and above interchangeably
  • a certified vehicular toll charging apparatus and processes hide trip details from a toll charging center by sending to a toll charging center data of calculated toll charge amounts with respect to in-vehicle set privilege criteria (free of charge toll or toll discount) without exposing trip details.
  • Hiding trip details from a toll charging center rather than applying secured transmission of trip details to a toll charging center, and further investing in prevention of access to such centralized stored data (which is susceptible to suspicious by those who are charged), may reduce negativism to apply tolling which is based on in-vehicle tracking. This is especially valuable when tolling is applied with the aim to encourage efficient usage of the network and possibly safe driving.
  • robust privacy preservation eliminates, or at least minimizes, possible negativism to said conditional tolling, since with robust privacy preservation the non-exposure of trip details can be guaranteed or at least an exposure can be under control of the owner of the vehicle.
  • Conditional tolling under said privilege criteria and hidden trip details from a toll charging center may resolve or at least reduce toll issues, it may in case of provision of privileges to usage of path controlled trips raise an issue of a need to obey by a driver to path controlled trips. Such an issue may be reduced to a minor level if the public will be aware of the compensation provided by path controlled trips to drivers and of alternatives.
  • the compensation for using path controlled trips may include high travel time savings, gained by the contribution of path controlled trips to traffic dilution, as well as contribution to an ability to avoid, or at least to postpone the need for applying traffic dilution by dilution of demand for trips using road tolling.
  • said tolling privileges may include privileges provided to usage of elements which contribute to safe driving.
  • the objective to apply high usage of autonomous vehicles in order to improve safe driving within cities may need inter-alia to reduce reaction of autonomous vehicles to human driving behaviors and in the future to eliminate such a need.
  • Reduction or elimination of a need to react to different human behaviors by autonomous vehicles may enable more anticipated and therefore more controllable interaction among vehicles.
  • By encouraging usage of automated driving, enabled by autonomous vehicles, while using said privileges to encourage automated driving may contribute to more effective cooperative and as a result more safe driving on road networks.
  • encouraging automated vehicle driving may facilitate the development of high usage of autonomous vehicles with respect to classification levels 4 and 5, determined by the Society of Automotive Engineers, to which usage condition layer may highly contribute by non full compulsory approach.
  • crowd sourcing may be generated by such an approach, enabling to contribute to additional safe driving aspects which may refer to robustness of real time mapping of dynamic environment surrounding vehicles.
  • crowd sourcing may enable autonomous vehicles to contribute to rapid mapping of changes in deployment of fixed object, such as a signpost and parking vehicles, as well as to rapid mapping of dynamic object such as vehicles and passengers.
  • mapping of a signpost may take benefit of crowd sourcing due to an ability to use multiple measurements, generated by multiple vehicles, and to fuse such measurements preferably according to relative weights corresponding to ambiguities in the measurements performed by different sensors of different vehicles using for example weighted least squares.
  • Crowd sourcing may also be used by encouraging usage of autonomous vehicles for more robust mapping of relative locations of vehicles surrounding the location of an autonomous vehicle, which mapping might be most valuable with autonomous driving of vehicles with respect to dynamic changes in the vicinity of a vehicle.
  • each vehicle may use its sensor related measurements to estimate relative distance of surrounding vehicles in addition to complementary measurements generated by neighbor vehicles, and accordingly to improve its measurements.
  • the approach to improve accuracy may use fusion of multiple source measurements by a single vehicle to determine dynamically relative distance and locations according to relative weights corresponding to ambiguities in the measurements performed by different sources using for example weighted least squares.
  • a usage condition layer applied with tolling privilege criteria to encourage cooperative safe driving as described above may also enable to contribute to lower classification levels than said level 4 or 5, by providing privileges to usage of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS).
  • ADAS Advanced Driver Assistance Systems
  • conditional tolling functionalities may be applied by a dedicated vehicular toll charging unit, a toll charging center and respective fixed car plate identification infrastructure using Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANRP), or alternatively for example, by upgrading apparatus and respective processes of an on-board unit of a GNSS tolling system (known also as GNSS toll pricing), as well as respective processes of a GNSS tolling center to apply said robust privacy preservation communication between the vehicular device and the tolling center.
  • ANRP Automatic Number Plate Recognition
  • the upgrade may enable to manage road toll privileges that hide trip details from a toll-charging center.
  • GNSS tolling which may refer in general to in-vehicle tracking for road tolling is not conceptually limited to vehicle positioning by GNSS.
  • positioning may possibly use in- vehicle sensor(s) based localization on maps, or use vehicle positioning by in-vehicle GNSS receiver which may be used to complement localization by initial coarse GNSS positioning of an autonomous vehicle.
  • Traffic mapping layer may refer to a system, apparatus and methods which map dynamic traffic information, generated by remote data sources in order to support higher level layers of a path control system.
  • the higher level layers of the path control system, which are supported by said dynamic information, are the traffic prediction layer applying traffic predictions and the paths planning layer applying calculation and assignment of path controlled trips.
  • the reception of data and the mapping of said dynamic information on a stored road map may fully be applied by a traffic mapping center, or be shared by the traffic mapping layer with relevant supported system layers and/or a system which is an external system to the path control system.
  • the dynamic information to be received and mapped in this respect may include under active usage condition layer:
  • Dynamic positions transmitted by vehicles using path controlled trips which under high usage of path controlled trips positions associated with path controlled trips construct the most complete traffic information, enabling to apply further robust traffic predictions by the traffic prediction layer and to calculate accordingly paths for path controlled trips by the paths planning layer.
  • Dynamic traffic information related data received by tracking positions of vehicles using path controlled trips and mapping such data by repositioning such vehicles on a road network map (to be used by a traffic simulator for traffic predictions), may serve both traffic prediction and paths planning layers.
  • Receiving position related data from vehicles should preferably be performed anonymously, wherein the term anonymously may refer to an ability to receive messages from vehicles using path controlled trips which avoid their identification , while enabling each of such vehicles to use a unique non identifying characteristic during a trip in order to further enable control on trips according to such non identifying characteristic.
  • Dynamic positions of vehicles using known non-flexible routes transmitted by in-vehicle apparatus or from a center which tracks such vehicles (e.g., bus having predetermined route usually with a plurality of bus stops).
  • Such positions which are associated with a predetermined path on a road network may preferably be received and mapped for redistributing their positions on a road network map to be used to simulate traffic predictions by the traffic prediction layer.
  • Such non flexible route related positions may enable to complement flexible route related positions to adjust the conditions of a traffic simulation platform to apply further robust traffic predictions.
  • Receiving data related to vehicles using non flexible routes may be performed anonymously, preferably within the communication apparatus between a path control system and vehicles and/or between path control system and said centers tracking such vehicles,.
  • distinguishable scheduled activation of a trip may be used for example as a non identifying characteristic.
  • Dynamic destination related to position pairs transmitted by vehicles at first with requests for guidance (route) according to path controlled trips and further with updates of their positions with respect to destinations, to be used with the paths planning layer in order to apply calculation of paths that produce accordingly and according to controllable traffic predictions preferably coordinated sets of paths for vehicles using path controlled trips.
  • Origin to destination pairs of path controlled trips may be stored and used in conjunction with historical position to destination pairs to map and predict zone to zone trip demands in order to apply traffic predictions by a traffic simulation platform used by the traffic prediction layer.
  • Dynamic zone-to-zone demand prediction is preferably performed in conjunction with historical position to destination pairs of requests for trip, preferably path controlled trips, to apply accordingly more accurate traffic predictions according to, for example, classes of vehicles (e.g., passenger cars, trucks, etc.).
  • Demand which refers to position to destination pairs
  • a driving navigation aid a destination while the respective position is generated by an in-vehicle positioning aid such as a GPS receiver which might be part of the driving navigation aid.
  • prescheduled trips are also applied with a path control system
  • prescheduled position to destination pairs of a trip may be associated with prediction of zone-to-zone demand.
  • demand related mapping may be applied by the traffic prediction layer.
  • Dynamic events which may affect the development of demand of trips which should preferably be used to improve a zone to zone demand prediction model for further traffic predictions performed by traffic simulation used with the traffic prediction layer.
  • Such events e.g., destination time and place of a football game
  • Dynamic structure changes in a road network transmitted for example using server to server communication in which the server which transmits updates is a server of an entity or an authority handling dynamic mapping of road networks.
  • Such updates should preferably update changes including capacities of links on the road network used by the traffic prediction layer and by the paths planning layer.
  • Dynamic changes in capacities on network roads for example, road maintenance, obstacles such as interfering parking, etc., transmitted for example using server to server communication in which the server which transmits updates is a server of an entity or an authority handling such dynamic data.
  • Such updates should update the capacities of links on the road network map used by the traffic prediction layer and by the paths planning layer.
  • Changes in capacities may further or alternatively be discovered by mapping dynamic positions of tracked vehicles, using for example dynamic positions to the path control system, as mentioned in 1 and 2, discovering irregularities in traffic flows by mapping accordingly bottlenecks/obstacles on links of a road network.
  • state estimation methods can be used, subject to sufficient knowledge about the input flow to a link, while capacity related corrections are made in which case to sections of lanes on links from which a link should preferably be constructed if applying such approach.
  • Dynamic changes in traffic control for example, traffic light plans, sign posts, and variable signals.
  • Such updates are transmitted to a path control system for example by a server of an entity or an authority handling such dynamic information and should preferably be used with the traffic prediction simulation platform associated with the traffic prediction layer.
  • Dynamic current traffic flows and queues might be valuable to be mapped, for example according to tracked positions mentioned in 1 and 2 above, in case there would be a need to complement missing data to adjust initial conditions for simulated traffic predictions, for example missing data of demand of trips which can be discovered by a state estimation method using traffic flows and queues.
  • Discovering demand data through traffic related data is a an approach which may preferably be considered under low usage of driving navigation aids by drivers, and which is expected under such conditions to be supported by external sensor infrastructure to map traffic flows in order to apply a state estimation process.
  • the problem may relate to a high dimension joint or dual state and parameters estimation by and for non linear time varying and stochastic traffic models.
  • non perfect but sufficiently effective usage condition layer in which there is rich but not complete information about trips on the network, there is a possibility to estimate missing data with lower complexity.
  • This may be effected by the sufficiently known data, which known data may relate to demand of trips and to model parameters of a traffic simulation platform, as well as to traffic data constructed according to current traffic flows mapped by tracked positions mentioned in 1 and 2 above, in order to adjust (calibrate) the traffic simulator for traffic predictions.
  • the traffic mapping layer may apply the traffic flow mapping while the state and parameters estimation which uses and prepares traffic simulation for traffic prediction is suggested to be performed by the traffic prediction layer.
  • constraints of known mapped demand, mentioned in 3 above, and traffic flow mapped according to 1 and 2 above, as well as according to known/planned paths of trips on the network and other mapped/known data mentioned up to 7 above, may be used to enable to discover more robustly missing demand data and parameters of traffic models used with traffic simulation.
  • data from fixed deployed sensors or any other external system can also be received from external system servers.
  • data may refer but not limited to traffic flow related data generated by road or roadside sensors and/or position related data and/or demand related data, and/or velocities related data, and/or queues related data, and /or traffic related events.
  • updates about road maps and/or signposts and/or positions of vehicles and/or traffic related information may be received from an external system such as a system which generates high resolution road maps for, and possibly by, autonomous vehicles and/or a system which tracks position of vehicles and/or a driving navigation system service (for example a commercial navigation service such as provided by a company such as Waze), and which driving navigation system and autonomous vehicles are preferably served directly or indirectly by a path control system.
  • an external system such as a system which generates high resolution road maps for, and possibly by, autonomous vehicles and/or a system which tracks position of vehicles and/or a driving navigation system service (for example a commercial navigation service such as provided by a company such as Waze), and which driving navigation system and autonomous vehicles are preferably served directly or indirectly by a path control system.
  • a driving navigation system service for example a commercial navigation service such as provided by a company such as Waze
  • Communication of path control system layers in general, and the traffic mapping layer specifically, with vehicles and external servers may use according to some embodiments Internet apparatus and with respect to vehicles Internet supported by mobile communication.
  • Tracked positions associated with path controlled trips may either be received by a path control system with respect to the traffic mapping layer through a push process activated by vehicles, or if there is expectations for data communication overloads then a pull process can be activated, for example, by the path control system according to IP addresses which were activated by vehicles and identified by the relevant process in the path control system.
  • Initial position to destination pairs associated with request for a path controlled trips, as well as tracked positions during a trip, may be transmitted by vehicles or by a navigation service system using a push process to a path control system.
  • Information received from an external system should preferably use server to server communication and may preferably use a push process.
  • Traffic prediction layer may refer to a system, apparatus and methods which include two stages, a prime stage aimed at preparing (calibrating) a traffic simulation platform for prediction according to current traffic and preferably demand of trips related data, and a subsequent traffic prediction stage, based on the prime stage, in which prediction of demand of trips (usually statistical prediction) provides the predicted entry events into the network according to which the simulated traffic models of the simulation platform predicts traffic development on the network.
  • prediction of demand of trips usually statistical prediction
  • past trip related demand is used to predict zone-to-zone demand of trips by, for example, time series analysis related methods and more advanced methods such as further described.
  • model predictive control enables to apply a control process which evaluates according to simulation of traffic prediction the effect of planned paths on a road network along a finite time horizon, in a rolling time horizon, and accordingly (according to feedback) make corrections to the planned paths preferably before applying assignment of paths to vehicles.
  • Controllable predictions in this respect synthesize traffic development according to control inputs which in this respect are planned (calculated) paths to be evaluated for path controlled trips performed according to some embodiments by a paths planning layer as further described.
  • a simulation platform may preferably use Dynamic Traffic Assignment (DTA) simulation platform, which models traffic by synthesizing acceptable real behavior of the traffic.
  • DTA Dynamic Traffic Assignment
  • Typical DTA simulators are used in the field of transportation mainly for transportation planning, and are the closest means to enable to apply predictive control for path-controlled trips.
  • current DTA simulators are yet limited to cope primarily with typical traffic simulation and not with concrete real time traffic, despite of using online calibration to adjust the simulator to simulate the closest traffic to real time traffic according to real time traffic data.
  • This limitation is a result of simplified models used with such simulators, satisfying to cope with typical stochastic behaviors of traffic for transportation planning, and therefore limits the ability to calibrate at low time resolution the traffic models for real time according to traffic information (which limited quality of traffic information makes the issue worse).
  • the issue increases with the increase in the size of the road network and with the increase in the dynamics of traffic on the network.
  • DTA simulators to be applied with predictive control to include, for example, cooperative safety behavior of autonomous vehicles, reaction to variable traffic signals, Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) infrastructure, Cooperative ITS (C-ITS) infrastructure, etc.
  • ITS Intelligent Transportation Systems
  • C-ITS Cooperative ITS
  • Typical DTA simulators are comprised of several models, which are grouped into two categories, namely a Demand Model and a Supply Model, wherein different DTA simulators have different accuracy levels, and which said models may include but not limited to functionalities with respect to:
  • a Demand Model which divides the network into zones among which trip pairs are assigned, expanded by a prediction model for zone to zone demand of trip pairs, and which Demand Model is applied with respect to non controlled trips on the network, for which there is no direct way to know their positions and destinations, and is applied for different classes of vehicles.
  • a demand prediction model which expands a basic Demand Model enables in real time to predict the demand according to past demand data and possibly also according to historical data, may apply statistical prediction models and possibly pattern recognition methods.
  • a more advanced Demand Model may include demand control models such as can be applied by road toll and early/late trip departure recommendations for trips and which such models may be associated with a demand prediction model.
  • a Supply Model which models network traffic flow development and which may include sub- models for, but not limited to, road network characteristics at a level of link lanes, intersections, etc., predetermined routes (e.g,. buses) and route choice model for the non controlled paths (non path controlled vehicles possibly according to classes of vehicles), traffic control means and their plans (such as traffic lights and variable signals), and, with high resolution DTA also intra link related traffic model (e.g., lane change behavior, car following behavior)
  • a more advanced DTA Supply Model which may expand a typical Supply Model used with road and transportation planning to support real time traffic predictions, should preferably include, according to available infrastructure, vehicle to vehicle communication effects considered to be applied with autonomous vehicles and/or with Cooperative Intelligent Transportation Systems effects on current and developing traffic.
  • DTA advanced simulators might not be sufficiently exploited at real time if massive positioning of vehicles at high resolution may not be applied (may not enable to simulate traffic at high resolution based on on-line calibration of a traffic simulation platform according to traffic data).
  • path controlled trips which can feasibly be applied under active usage condition layer, applied for example with autonomous vehicles using sensor based high resolution localization on road maps and preferably path controlled trips, preferably applying predictive driving behavior model(s) with a DTA simulator such as driving behavior model(s) of autonomous vehicles, may enable to utilize at the highest level high resolution Supply Models at substantially real time - producing more accurate traffic simulation of current traffic at substantially real time and more accurate traffic predictions.
  • the most robust DTA based traffic predictions may be applied under conditions in which most of the traffic is generated by autonomous vehicles using with the Supply Model of a DTA predictive behavior driving model(s) of autonomous vehicles including vehicle to vehicle communication effects if applied, that is, to simulate predictive motion of vehicles and predictive interactions among/between vehicles by the DTA Supply Model according to driving behavior model(s) applied by autonomous vehicles.
  • Robust path controlled trips preferably refer to path controlled trips under a control of a path control system which apply predictive path control to coordinate path controlled trips.
  • the introduced term predictive path control is actually coordinating path control (mentioned above and hereinafter), and both terms, predictive path control and coordinating path control, may be used interchangeably whether autonomous vehicles or other vehicles are referred to these terms.
  • Adjusting a DTA simulation platform according to real time traffic data by said prime stage (on-line DTA calibration stage), without tracking positions of the vast majority or even most of the vehicles, is a complicated task for a city size road network.
  • the issue becomes worse under conditions in which very limited data about traffic and demand is available and which issue further increases with the increase in the size of the city.
  • Such conditions are expected to be typical, while usage condition layer is not applied, without an ability to map traffic at high resolution by relatively low cost floating car data.
  • traffic and demand related data are mapped by the traffic mapping layer, as described above, and traffic prediction layer servers receive such data from the traffic mapping layer servers, either by server to server communication or through a common storage handled possibly by a common database server.
  • the traffic prediction layer applies the demand related data mapping (position to destination pairs and respective zone to zone demand assignment) which may include receiving demand related data, originated by vehicles using path controlled trips, directly through communication means or indirectly through the traffic mapping layer which interacts with the vehicles.
  • the demand related data mapping position to destination pairs and respective zone to zone demand assignment
  • the traffic mapping layer which interacts with the vehicles.
  • high usage of path controlled trips generated for example by the usage condition layer
  • conditions to generate more authentic (rather than estimated) current demand is enabled, using in vehicle data related to path controlled trips.
  • Demand along a past period of time enabling to predict zone to zone demand, may be mapped according to positions and destination pairs originated with requests for path controlled trips and complemented by estimation of non controlled trips demand, while estimation of non controlled trips demand by the prime stage, under active usage condition layer and path control, becomes at worst case marginal and at the best case redundant and, in any case, robustness of the demand can be achieved at a level which is incomparably higher than the estimation level which might be achieved under non encouraged usage of path control trips generated for example by a usage condition layer.
  • positions of vehicles using path controlled trips on the network may also be gathered and the rich gathered data drastically simplify the prime stage (on-line calibration of the simulation platform by said calibration and estimation stage). This is a result of an ability to substantially map dynamic distribution of real time positions associated with known planned paths of the vehicles on a DTA simulator network.
  • the position as well as respective destination related data are gathered by method(s) enabling anonymous transmission of data from vehicles to a path control system in order to maintain privacy of the source of data in conjunction with anonymous assignment of path controlled trips to vehicles.
  • Another advantage of high usage of path controlled trips, with respect to DTA based traffic predictions, is the ability to use high quality DTAs which under joint/dual demand and parameters estimation might not be feasible to be used in substantially real time.
  • low usage of path controlled trips compels a need to apply calibration and estimation by the prime stage using dual or joint state estimation which is a highly consuming task with respect to computation power for high dimension demand and non linear supply model even for a case of a non high resolution DTA and which issue increases with the stochastic route choice model of a DTA and size of the road network.
  • traffic prediction is performed by the DTA demand and supply models according to predictions made first to the demand model.
  • Prediction to the demand can use for example time series analysis.
  • the time series analysis may be supported, for example, by historical patterns to substantially linearize time series processed data and performing time series analysis on the differences between similar historical and current patterns.
  • Interaction of the traffic prediction layer server(s) with the traffic mapping layer server(s) and with the paths planning layer servers may be applied by server to server communication or through a common storage (database server(s) of for example client/server N-tier architecture).
  • such approach may enable the traffic layer, to interact with external server(s) in substantially real time in order to receive traffic control related updates to be applied with a DTA supply model, for example, traffic lights control plan and changes in the deployment of traffic lights, signposts, and variable signals/signposts, and which such server may, for example, be updated by, or on behalf of, authorities.
  • a DTA supply model for example, traffic lights control plan and changes in the deployment of traffic lights, signposts, and variable signals/signposts
  • an update about exceptional event (e.g., a football game), which may be added to traffic control related updates, may enable further to improve demand predictions, for example with the support of similar event related historical flow pattern(s), and be handled through a server through which the traffic prediction layer may receive such data.
  • exceptional event e.g., a football game
  • Paths planning layer may refer to a system, apparatus and methods which apply planning of paths to produce path controlled trips.
  • path control may refer to coordinating and non coordinating path control, wherein the coordination approach is a-priori the preferred approach to be applied if it may contribute to non negligible improvement in the traffic on a road network.
  • Predictive path control which applies non coordinating path control is mainly applicable to very small percentage of non coordinating path controlled trips that may have acceptably small enough mutual potential interference.
  • the planning of paths for non coordinating path control trips is performed according feedbacks from controlled traffic predictions which indicate on the potential effects of planned paths and accordingly planned paths may be corrected with the aim to improve travel times.
  • a controlled traffic prediction according to a simplified description, applies for a time horizon in a rolling horizon by dynamic traffic simulator that is fed by planned paths for current and predicted path controlled trips and by current and predicted paths associated with route choice model for non controlled traffic.
  • the planning of paths is a simple reaction to time dependent travel time costs according to simulated feedback, performing shortest path calculations according to the travel time costs.
  • non coordinating path controlled trips may mainly be considered as a theoretical solution for small percentage on the network, while in reality a further major difficulty to implement robust on line calibration and traffic predictions, for a large networks, disables such approach to provide robust solution even for small percentage of path controlled trips.
  • Predictive path control which applies coordinating path control is aimed at putting no limit on the percentage of usage of path controlled trips on the network while enabling to implement a robust solution for very high percentage of path controlled trips on the network.
  • additional aspect of planning coordinating paths for path controlled trips is applied.
  • the paths planning layer interacts with the traffic prediction layer, constructing coordinating control cycles (phases) and possibly sub-phases (iterations) as further described in more detail with some embodiments.
  • Each cycle (phase) or sub-phase includes traffic prediction, performed by the traffic prediction layer, and calculation of a set of paths by the paths planning layer, wherein traffic prediction performed by the traffic prediction layer uses a prior set of paths calculated by a prior control cycle, or sub-phase (iteration), as an input to the supply model of a DTA simulation platform which performs the current traffic prediction.
  • predictions in this respect enable to evaluate the effect of the recently calculated set of current and predicted paths for path controlled trips on the network and which such effect provides feedback to a subsequent cycle or a sub-phase (iterations) of a cycle enabling a further cycle or a further sub-phase (iteration) of a cycle to further improve the traffic flow.
  • sub-phases (iterations) of control cycles may be distinguished from control cycles by being less sensitive to re-calibration of a DTA and demand estimation stage in the traffic prediction layer in order to perform a new set of paths, and therefore re-calibration might not necessarily be a need with each sub-phase or even with all sub-phases within a cycle (phase).
  • the objective of a control cycle or sub-phase is to refine prior set of calculated paths under the assumption that recalibration during a control cycle may have lower benefit in comparison to the benefit to perform higher number of refinements to the set of paths.
  • Coordinating paths associated with trips on the network may enable to exploit the potential of freedom degrees on the network to improve traffic flow through path-controlled trips provided to driving navigation aids (associated with guidance means) to guide drivers or autonomous vehicles during trips towards their destinations.
  • a path planning layer may prevent or at least reduce potential interferences in the traffic which may be a result of uncontrolled or poorly controlled attempts of guidance of vehicles to take benefit of traffic predictions without coordination among trips, and which such functionality is mandatory with an implementation of a high usage of navigation aids generated for example by a usage condition layer.
  • high usage of path controlled trips under coordinating path control may not just be able to prevent loss of control on the traffic but also be able to exploit the capacity of a network to best serve given demand for the highest traffic flow enabled on the network.
  • coordination of paths should be sensitive to fairness constraint and be handled anonymously in order to be widely acceptable. That is, coordination of paths should preferably consider that from a point of view of drivers (and/or passengers) the interest should be a- priori not sacrificing their own interest for the interest of others in order to improve the performance of path control on the network.
  • the paths planning layer is the top layer of a path control system which preferably calculates coordinated sets of paths aimed at progressively being adapted dynamically to maintain substantial fair coordination of paths under non linear time varying conditions, with the objective to maximize traffic flow by assigning preferably coordinated sets of paths to path controlled trips.
  • the layers of a path control system are applied as applications on application servers of for example a modified client/server N-tier architecture to support real time related requirements associated with traffic control or another architecture according to convenience.
  • Common communication apparatus and methods may serve direct interaction of layers with external servers and/or vehicles.
  • the usage condition layer may interact with vehicles and with car identification system (using for example Automatic Number Plate Recognition - ANRP) through web servers.
  • car identification system using for example Automatic Number Plate Recognition - ANRP
  • layers of a path control system which may be applied, for example, as applications in a model such as an improved client/server N-tier architecture to support real time requirements or another architecture, are not restricted to use traditional protocols of such architecture.
  • an improved client/server N-tier architecture should preferably be improved by efficient methods to handle under real time communication constraints, more efficient protocols such as, for example, WebSocket or http/2 supported by WebSocket or at least by SSE, or UDP preferably supported by WebSocket or at least by SSE, or according to tight real time constraints using other methods enabling to make real time constrained communication efficient.
  • Security aspects may further include known methods which for example upgrade of http/2 by TLS.
  • Communication mediums between vehicles and the traffic mapping layer may include but not be limited to, for example, cellular mobile communication networks and/or Dedicated Short Range Communication (known as DSRC in the field of Intelligent Transportation Systems - ITS), and Internet related infrastructure.
  • DSRC Dedicated Short Range Communication
  • the communication apparatus could serve any single layer of a path control system separately, that is, supporting either all the layers used by a path control system or part of them which are served by such apparatus.
  • a paths planning layer for example may receive position to destination pairs, originated by drivers through a driving navigation aid, enabling accordingly planning paths for path controlled trips and further transmit such paths to respective vehicles which are using path controlled trips.
  • the usage condition layer may interact with vehicles enabling to handle toll charging and toll privileges.
  • an example that may present the described approach, whether by applying the above-described layers or just by applying said functionalities associated with such layers and/or with further described embodiments of the present invention may comprise:
  • a method and a system according to which conditions to improve traffic flow on a road network are encouraged by encouraging directly or indirectly usage of vehicles having in-vehicle driving navigation aids which interact with drivers, or with driving control means of autonomous-vehicles, to guide trips of vehicles according to path controlled trips.
  • Such method and system comprise: a) receiving by an in-vehicle driving navigation aid data for dynamic path assignments,
  • a said vehicle may include possibly an autonomous vehicle classified as level
  • a said vehicle may include possibly an autonomous vehicle classified as level
  • DTA simulator includes models of motion of autonomous vehicles on roads and interactions of autonomous vehicles with other vehicles on roads and/or
  • coordination control phases possibly apply fairness related processes applying non travel time related discrimination among assigned path controlled trips and/or
  • an entitlement for privilege include a criterion according to which travel on certain predetermined links requires that a trip will be stopped for a minimum predetermined time.
  • a method and system according to which improved safe driving on a road network is encouraged by encouraging usage of in-vehicle safety aids comprise:
  • safety aids are possibly cooperative safe driving aids enabling to improve a single in-vehicle measurement of a safety driving aid by in-vehicle fusion of the in-vehicle measurement with one or more respective external measurements performed by other one or more other vehicles and received by a vehicle fusion apparatus through vehicle to vehicle communication
  • privilege provision refers to usage of both safety driving aids and path controlled trips
  • the figures provide a simplified description, in comparison to textual description of embodiments, with an objective that the textual description of the figures may be complemented by respective embodiments described in more details in the present invention.
  • Path control system related figures are illustrated at a level that leaves implementation-flexibility to combine the functionalities comprising the system according to implementation constraints.
  • coordination control processes which may coordinate tasks of a path control system are not part of the illustrated figures.
  • path control processes may coordinate tasks performed by different system layers and within system layers. This may for example include but not be limited to synchronization processes which inter-alia: a) coordinate distributed computation performed by path controlled trips associated agents, b) coordinate paths for path controlled trips according to traffic predictions with path planning performed by agents, c) coordinate traffic mapping with on-line calibration of a traffic simulation platform, d) coordinate input and output processes required with a need to enable control on path-controlled trips.
  • Fig. la schematically illustrates according to some embodiments a system and apparatus to apply path control system 232 which describes top level data flow among described functionalities such as path control layers and vehicular controlled platform 229.
  • Rectangle 232a may refer to for example centralized implementation of path control system layers 211, 217, 221 and 224 using common communication servers.
  • the usage condition layer 224 communicates with toll charging units of vehicles comprising the vehicular controlled platform 229 through 225 and 239b, and with car plate identification system 226 (using Automatic Number Plate Recognition - ANRP) through 225.
  • each vehicle has a common transmitter for its DNA and toll charging unit.
  • vehicle 1 transmits accordingly data to the path control system layers through 230al.
  • the traffic mapping layer 221 receives and maps all the dynamic data transmitted from driving navigation aids, and transmits the mapped data to the traffic prediction layer 217 and to the path planning layer 211.
  • the traffic prediction layer 217 feeds through 213 traffic prediction travel time costs on the road network links to the paths planning layer 211.
  • the paths planning layer calculates accordingly sets of coordinated paths which are fed back to the traffic prediction layer through 210a to apply further controlled traffic predictions, and which set of coordinated paths are transmitted as well to vehicles through 210b to update path controlled trips in driving navigation aids.
  • Inputs of dynamic information related data from external systems may be fed to the path control system through logical links 216, 220 and 223, and which data may refer to data from external systems and servers described above, including but not limited to, for example; a) road network map updates through 223, b) exceptional demand related events updates and traffic flow related updates through 220, and c) traffic control related updates through 216.
  • Fig. lb schematically illustrates according to some embodiments a system and apparatus to apply path control system 232 which describes top level data flow among described functionalities such as path control layers and vehicular controlled platform 229, wherein Fig. lb differs from Fig. la by enabling vehicles to communicate directly with the path planning layer, for example, for requesting path controlled trips, and updating time related positions of path controlled trips.
  • Fig.lc schematically illustrates according to some embodiments a system and apparatus to apply path control system 232 which describes top level data flow among described functionalities such as path control layers and vehicular controlled platform 229, wherein Fig.lc differs from Fig. lb by enabling vehicles to communicate directly with the traffic prediction layer, for example, in order to inform about time related positions of path controlled trips by a respective update .
  • Fig. Id schematically illustrates according to some embodiments a system and apparatus to apply path control system 232 which describes top level data flow among described functionalities such as path control layers and vehicular controlled platform 229, wherein Fig. Id differs from Fig.lc by enabling vehicles to communicate separately with the usage condition layer, using a dedicated transmitter for such purpose, for example, a toll charging unit radio transmitter.
  • vehicle 1 for example transmits through 239alT data from the toll charging unit to the usage condition layer and through 239alD data from the DNA to other layers of the path control system.
  • Fig. le differs from fig. Id and fig. lc, by ignoring the communication apparatus, enabling to concentrate on data flows in order to facilitate the description of further expansions using fig.le as a reference.
  • Fig. If expands according to some embodiments the system described by fig. le with driving navigation aid which is served by a path control system. With such embodiments, requests for path controlled trips are handled by the driving navigation system which communicates on one hand with driving navigation aids through 235 and with the path planning layer through 234 for updating vehicles with path controlled trips.
  • further data which vehicles may originate to support path control may be received by the path control layers through 234, 236 and 237 through the driving navigation aid.
  • direct communication of vehicles with the traffic mapping layer, with the traffic prediction layer and with the paths planning layer might become redundant.
  • Fig. lg differs from fig. If by enabling direct updates of time related positions associated with path controlled trips to be transmitted from vehicles to one or more layers of 232 and which said updates serve the need for such data to be used by the traffic prediction layer and by the paths planning layer for their ongoing operation, as described above.
  • said updates enable further to confirm, for example, by211 the usage of path controlled trips according to path controlled trips planned by 211 and transmitted to the DNA through 233.
  • Confirmation according to such embodiments may be obtained by preventing vulnerability to undiscovered intervention of a driving navigation system 233 in the path control and/or in the updates. This can be performed according to some embodiments with minimal involvement of 233 by performing the updates by the toll charging unit which anyhow should receive the path associated with the assigned path controlled trip to the vehicle in which the toll charging unit is installed in order to handle privileged tolling.
  • Associating a position related update with the path of the controlled trip enables to compare the transmitted path with path controlled trip generated by 211 to validate matches and validate for example by 211 usage of path controlled trips according to assigned paths.
  • an alternative to said transmission and comparison of paths is to associate trip Identification (ID) number with each assigned path for path controlled trip, for example by 211, and further transmit the path associated with the trip ID to 233 through 234 in order to assign the path to a respective DNA through 235.
  • the DNA uses the trip ID number with its updated paths of path controlled trips transmitted to the toll charging unit.
  • Anonymity of position related updates by a toll charging unit, associated either with path controlled trip or with trip ID, can be maintained by transmitting non vehicle identification updates to the path control system 232.
  • path control system 232 there is an ability to confirm usage of path controlled trips assigned by 211, as a byproduct of the updates to the layers of 232.
  • a confirmation process can be performed, for example by an extension to 232, preferably to 211 in 232.
  • Privacy preservation is a sensitive issue with respect to a claim about an ability by an entity or an authority which has access to both vehicle identifying messages such as tolling related messages and anonymous type of messages such as position related updates which are transmitted from a common unit through for example mobile internet.
  • vehicle identifying messages such as tolling related messages
  • anonymous type of messages such as position related updates which are transmitted from a common unit through for example mobile internet.
  • a common IP address may enable to associate vehicle ID with an anonymous transmission update. That is, association of vehicle ID with anonymous messages may further enable to associate details about path controlled trips with the respective vehicle ID.
  • the cheapest approach to apply different IP addresses is by establishing different Internet sessions for anonymous and for non anonymous messages, enabling for example to allocate by a service provider different IP addresses to different sessions.
  • a less robust approach to apply anonymous updates to layers of 232 is by enabling the DNA to transmit directly said anonymous updates associated preferably with said trip IDs.
  • the toll charging unit may not mandatorily be equipped with its own mobile internet communication apparatus, enabling tolling to be applied by a toll charging unit through other communication means.
  • Such means may be used by a toll charging unit directly, for example, by using WiFi communication or provide indirect communication through a Smartphone or through a common in-vehicle mobile communication means which can use for example Bluetooth communication, preferably under secured communication which may prevent intervention of a third party in the communication of a toll charging unit with the usage condition layer.
  • a possibility to fake communication by a non authorized toll charging unit may be avoided by two means.
  • the first possibility refers to the assumption that the chain from production to installation of a vehicular toll charging unit is applied under license and under supervision, and therefore there is no reason that claims about privacy preserving faking product would arise.
  • the second more stronger additional possibility refers to an ability to validate authentic installation of a toll charging unit to confirm authentic communication by authorized installed toll charging unit.
  • This may be enabled when the toll charging unit transmits a non anonymous position related message associated with vehicle registration number to the usage condition layer, for example, during a privileged tolling procedure.
  • a received message by the usage condition layer from a toll charging unit may initiate by the usage condition layer a search process for a match between the transmitted vehicle registration number from a toll charging unit and stored data associated with the vehicle registration number which was received from the car plate identification system (using Automatic Number Plate Recognition - ANRP) by the usage condition layer.
  • the usage condition layer may further confirm through additional data associated with toll charging messages, such as time related position recorded by the toll charging unit when the vehicle was in the vicinity of a camera (used with Automatic Number Plate Recognition - ANRP) of a car plate identification system, that a vehicle plate identification received from the car plate identification system by the usage condition layer substantially matches the same time related position for the same registration number.
  • additional data associated with toll charging messages such as time related position recorded by the toll charging unit when the vehicle was in the vicinity of a camera (used with Automatic Number Plate Recognition - ANRP) of a car plate identification system, that a vehicle plate identification received from the car plate identification system by the usage condition layer substantially matches the same time related position for the same registration number.
  • Locations of cameras may for example be updated in the toll charging unit through a process in which the toll charging unit receives such updated location, for example, from the usage condition layer.
  • a further approach enabling to validate authentic installation of a toll charging unit may use a communication signature recording process which the toll charging unit and the usage condition layer activate according to determined criteria as a result of a communication session.
  • a recording process records characteristic(s) related to non anonymous communication between the toll charging unit and the usage condition layer which may further be compared to verify matches. Characteristics may include, for example, time of a communication session, type of communication session, and other data related to the communication sessions.
  • Access to stored signatures of a toll charging unit preferably stored in a non volatile memory, may be part of a regulatory process executed, for example, by entities authorized to make annual regulatory test for vehicles which provides a vehicle with regulatory approval car certificate.
  • the entity may read by authorized equipment secured stored data from the toll charging unit including but not limited to said signatures.
  • the signatures may further be compared with respective signatures stored by the usage condition layer for the same vehicle (e.g., according to the same registration number). Confirmation of a match according to a comparison may validate usage of authentic communication performed by toll charging unit installed in the vehicle.
  • Such apparatus and methods to validate authentic installation of a toll charging unit are not unique to the system illustrated in fig.lg and may be applied with relevant illustrated systems in other figures.
  • Fig. lh differs from fig. lg by enabling to feed traffic predictions from a path control system to a traffic light control optimization system 215 through 214 enabling to improve traffic lights control in forward time intervals covered by the predicted flows. This further enables to get feedback from 215 through 216 for adapted traffic light plans according to the traffic predictions from 217 and improve accordingly the path control.
  • Fig.l schematically illustrates vehicular apparatus and methods to apply according to some embodiments interaction of a vehicle with a path control system.
  • separate transmitters for a toll charging unit and for a DNA is suggested to be applied and which such approach may refer to the vehicular apparatus complying with fig. Id up to fig.lh.
  • the vehicular apparatus may serve three modes of operation: idle tracked mode, trip tracked mode, and tolling mode.
  • continuous authentic installation of a toll charging unit in the vehicle is verified by, for example, sampling the toll charging unit by the usage condition layer through 239alT to assure continuous authentic installation using vehicle authentication records which are stored under authorized installation of a toll charging unit and continuous time records applied with a toll charging unit at all modes of operations (including idle mode).
  • This mode can be applied by an extension to the PTT processing which is further described.
  • Trip tracked mode operation should be activated while a car is traveling, using for example indication from a GNSS receiver installed in the in- vehicle toll charging unit.
  • the toll charging unit activates a Privilege Certification Control processes (PCC), which processes may include but not limited to, for example, tracking obedience to path controlled trip through 246 and certification of the level of obedience with respect to a level of entitlement to privileged road toll according to criteria stored preferably in the toll charging unit, and/or monitoring active contribution to usage of ADAS through for example 246, and/or monitoring active contribution to cooperative safety driving of autonomous vehicles by for example cooperative localization estimation, possibly through 246.
  • the PCC may certify such conditions with respect to entitlement to privileged road toll.
  • Tolling mode may be activated by the toll charging unit according to arrival to destination of a path controlled trip or be activated by a toll charging layer based on stored tolling related data on the toll charging unit.
  • trip details related Privacy Preservation Tolling (PPT) processes are activated by the toll charging unit, enabling hidden trip related tolling management, including for example privileges of free of charge toll and/or toll discount to be applied according to certification from PCC processes.
  • Criteria entitling for privileges may refer but not limited to usage of, for example, path controlled trip and/or elements such as ADAS, and/or using autonomous vehicle enabling to contribute to cooperative safe driving.
  • usage of automatic driving mode by the vehicle may enable to receive indication by the toll charging unit through for example 246, enabling the PCC processes to entitle the vehicle with privilege of, for example, free of charge toll or toll discount.
  • such privilege may be activated through said indication received by the toll charging unit about usage of certified ADAS or by an integrated device which includes at least a toll charging unit and a certified ADAS.
  • the trip tracked mode may be expanded to include, in addition to said tasks, confirmation of path controlled trip usage and/or other privilege entitling conditions during a trip, and which process may be initiated by a car plate identification system (using Automatic Number Plate Recognition - ANRP) as a result of inspection to enforce toll charge on non privileged entitled trips including usage of path controlled trips and/or other toll privileging conditions.
  • Conditions entitling vehicle trips with privileges other than usage of path controlled trips should preferably be tracked as well during the trip in order to enable to entitlement for full privileges.
  • Enforcement of tolling on non privileged trips may include identification of a car plate which triggers a confirmation process to confirm usage of path controlled trip by the identified vehicle, for example, by transmitting a message to the usage condition layer to verify and validate entitlement to privileges for the identified vehicle.
  • the usage condition layer transmits a message to the respective toll charging unit to validate entitlement for privilege with respect to the time of the identification.
  • the transmission by the usage condition layer should preferably be performed under conditions in which an IP address is activated by the toll charging unit which differs from an IP address used with anonymous communication, which may serve path controlled trip related position transmission updates, in order to not identify the anonymous source while enabling vehicle identification such as registration number under privacy preservation of trip details.
  • the toll charging unit may accordingly validate trip conditions entitling privileges, such as usage of path controlled trip through the trip tracked mode related processes, and respond with a respective confirming message or a non confirming message to the usage condition layer.
  • direct interaction between the car plate identification system and the toll charging unit may save intervention of the usage condition layer under conditions of confirmed usage of path controlled trip by the vehicle.
  • Communication between a toll charging unit and the usage condition layer may preferably include secure communication between the toll charging unit and the usage condition layer in order to prevent intervention in the communication chain by a non authorized process.
  • Fig. li2 illustrates schematically a toll charging unit and its interaction with in-vehicle DNA and a path control system, using according to some embodiments in-vehicle communication means including mobile Internet means, instead of using a dedicated communication means associated with the toll charging unit as illustrated by fig. lil.
  • Communication between a toll charging unit and the usage condition layer may preferably include secure communication between the toll charging unit and the usage condition layer in order to prevent intervention in the communication chain by a non authorized process.
  • the toll charging unit may use, preferably under secured communication, WiFi communication or a Smartphone, through for example Bluetooth, to communicate with the usage condition layer.
  • Fig.li3 illustrates schematically expanded configuration of vehicular apparatus described with fig.li2, enabling to support privileges to cooperative safe driving.
  • Indication about usage of functionality which activates cooperative safe driving mode is received for example by the toll charging unit from 246b through 246 using, for example, wireless local area network (WLAN).
  • WLAN wireless local area network
  • Cooperative safety which should preferably be applied with automated driving mode of an autonomous vehicle, may preferably use fusion of multiple sensors measurements from multiple vehicles.
  • implementation of free of charge toll or toll discount is used to provide privilege for usage of functionalities which apply cooperative safe driving by a vehicle.
  • Such non full compulsory approach may preferably be applied to generate conditions for robust cooperative safety driving which is a major factor to guarantee safe automated driving by autonomous vehicles and safe driving by Cooperative Intelligent Transportation (C-ITS).
  • C-ITS Cooperative Intelligent Transportation
  • Fig. li3a illustrates schematically the sensing, communication and fusion functionalities involved with cooperative mapping of relative distances between a vehicle and other vehicles, and which mapping may be expanded to improve sensor based localization of a vehicle on high resolution in-vehicle map (used by autonomous vehicles) based also on vehicle to vehicle communication functionalities and functionalities to fuse a plurality of sensor measurements performed by each vehicle of a plurality of vehicles.
  • Mapping cooperatively interrelated distances among vehicles VI, V2 and V3, may use vehicle to vehicle transmission of in-vehicle sensing measurements through vehicle to vehicle (V2V) communication, wherein each of the vehicles may share with other vehicles measurements enabling by each of the vehicles to fuse similar measurements generated by other vehicles in order to improve by each vehicle its own measurement(s) .
  • V2V vehicle to vehicle
  • Fusion of multiple source measurements by a single vehicle enables to determine more robustly relative dynamic distance which may be applied according to relative weights corresponding to ambiguities in similar measurements performed by different sources using for example weighted least squares.
  • An option to improve in-vehicle sensor based localization of a vehicle on an in-vehicle high resolution road map, by cooperative localization may be enabled by for example sharing further a localization result performed by a vehicle according to a fixed object, such as a signpost, with other vehicles having used the same object for their localization, and to improve by each vehicle its own localization by fusion of multiple source measurements to determine location according to relative weights corresponding to ambiguities in the measurements using for example weighted least squares.
  • This option may further be used to backup or to complement vehicle to vehicle dynamically estimated distances, according to dynamically estimated distances among vehicles, according to in-vehicle positioning of the vehicles performed to localize the vehicle on a high resolution road map.
  • fusion of relative dynamically measured distances according to positioning of vehicles, using fixed object having known accurate position as a reference, with relative distances mapped according to relative mapping of dynamic objects may contribute to the accuracy of both, the localization of the vehicle on a road map and the mapping of distances.
  • Fusion of multiple estimates by a single vehicle may be applied according to relative weights corresponding to ambiguities in similar estimates, performed by different sources, using for example weighted least squares.
  • Fig.lj 1 up to fig. Ij3 illustrate schematically embodiments for the coordination of path controlled trips preferably applied with a basic paths planning layer, wherein inputs and outputs in the figures refer to different inputs and outputs in other figures describing different implementation alternatives to apply a path control system and which some of the alternatives are described by such figures.
  • Fig.lj 4 and Fig.lj 5 illustrate schematically basic traffic prediction layer with respect to different embodiments in which some of them apply mapping of demand of trips as described in fig.lj 4.
  • Fig.lj 4 and Fig.lj 5 illustrate schematically basic traffic prediction layer with respect to different embodiments in which some of them apply mapping of demand of trips as described in fig.lj 4.
  • Path controlled trips planned according to prior control cycle is fed to the DTA through 210 or 210a.
  • Constraints according to mapped demand performed by the traffic layer may according to fig.lj5 be received directly through 218 as illustrated in fig. Ij5. Further elaboration on vehicular apparatus, methods, and functionalities, and on apparatus, methods, and functionalities of the path control system, is provided with following description of embodiments of the invention.
  • all the above mentioned layers that is, usage condition layer, traffic mapping layer, traffic prediction layer and paths planning layer, may be applied as complementary layers of a path control system.
  • each of the layers or functionalities descried with the layers may be applied independently, for example, to support other systems and/or to support a system which applies less functionalities or more functionalities in comparison to described layers or to apply functionalities described hereinafter and above by the present invention at any combination and at any level of complexity of implementation.
  • the benefit of using all the layers is expected to be highest enabling robust and high performance of path controlled trips and further lower dependency of traffic predictions on non deterministic (stochastic) behavior of drivers with respect to usage of route choice models.
  • applying the traffic prediction layer without using the paths planning layer should preferably not be supported by the usage condition layer, since non controlled usage of traffic prediction may affect negatively local network flows due to high potential of conflicts among drivers that may attempt to take benefit of predicted freedom degrees on the network without coordinating path control. Therefore, without a paths planning layer applying coordination among path controlled trips, while using just on traffic predictions to support planning of paths, there should be a need to limit the level of usage of driving navigation aids usage to a level which may minimize the negative effects of non- coordinated trips on the network.
  • traffic prediction layer and the paths planning layer which are applied without applying the usage condition layer, may improve the traffic flow on the network although only a limited percentage of path controlled trips may be expected to be used.
  • control on paths of trips with at least the aim to resolve above mentioned issues.
  • a control on paths may be implemented as an upgrade to available driving navigation aids and/or respective navigation control system used to guide drivers or autonomous driving of vehicles on roads.
  • a driving navigation aid may refer but not be limited to a dedicated driving navigation aid which assists drivers verbally or visually, or by both means, to reach destination according to a planned route to destination; or may refer to a driving navigation aid software application installed for example on a Smartphone, or may refer to a DNA functionality which is part of an autonomous driving vehicle system which assists autonomous driving toward destination.
  • a difference between a DNA used to assist a driver and a DNA used to assist an autonomous vehicle is that a DNA which is used to assist a driver may be based solely on GNSS positioning supported by map matching, whereas a DNA used with an autonomous vehicle may take benefit of vehicle localization on high resolution road maps and which its positioning is performed with the support of sensors such as Laser scanner(s) and/or Radar(s) and/or Camera(s).
  • said control on paths may be provided as an upgrade to a system that provides driving navigation service, wherein paths for path controlled trips are provided to drivers or autonomous vehicles through DNA by a driving navigation service system platform, or by an upgrade to a virtual model of a driving navigation service system platform which may guide drivers and autonomous vehicles to their respective destinations.
  • Examples of driving navigation service platforms in this respect may refer but not be limited to system platforms used for example by Google and Waze respective services, or to services provided, for example, by other operators , or to driving navigation system services that are serving, or might upgrade automakers' platform(s) to serve, DNAs.
  • an installed base of driving navigation service may, for example, provide a platform or a model for a platform to be upgraded by dynamic path controlled trips, which enables traffic distribution for load balancing on the network, as well as may provide further a platform or a model for an additional upgrade which may enable to generate conditions for high usage of path controlled trips on the network.
  • Control on path calculations for path controlled trips refers to a process which is aimed at improving the traffic flow on the network, preferably by leading to load balancing of traffic on the network, and which traffic improvement is aimed at exploiting degrees of freedom on a road network according to predicted demand of trips and predicted traffic, in order to preferably substantially maximize the traffic flow on the network.
  • Said control on paths may refer hereinafter to the term path control, and may be categorized as a model predictive control oriented system and method in which traffic prediction simulations synthesize, by the support of dynamic traffic assignment (DTA) simulator, traffic development according to path controlled trips, and which path control preferably shapes the traffic toward load balance according to effects of controlled paths on traffic predictions; wherein a DTA simulator enables prediction to be sensitive to non linear and time varying traffic flows on a network with traffic predictions.
  • DTA dynamic traffic assignment
  • path control refers further to coordination of path controlled trips, preferably performed by a method which assigns paths dynamically to trips according to controlled traffic predictions, and which paths that are assigned to trips are preferably aimed at converging gradually to substantial fair assignment of paths among trips, leading to substantial load balance on the network.
  • fairness that might be considered to be satisfied by non discriminating assignment of paths may cause negative developing effect(s) on the network, due to preferred commitment to apply simultaneous non-discriminating search for paths in order to exploit a common freedom degree(s) on the network, (which means applying simultaneous greedy search for paths), and which said negative effect(s) should preferably be resolved by further path control which gradually diverts minimum initial said non discriminating paths to alternative path s in order to overcome the negative effect(s).
  • the gradual diversion should preferably take benefit of assigned paths which may take benefit of the freedom degrees on the network by some other alternatives to the alternatives which found to be the cause for potential negative effects on the network.
  • Freedom degrees may refer hereinafter and above to, for example, naturally developing freedom degrees on the network due to dynamic demand and/or to, for example, relatively freedom degrees which may develop as result of irregularity in the traffic and/or as a result of changes in paths which reduces load balance of the traffic on the network.
  • the path control enables both convergence towards load balance and fairness in the assignment of paths.
  • the approach may enable rapid convergence towards load balance which may be achieved by sufficient computation power to maintain control on high share of path controlled trips in the traffic, while maintaining corrections to deviations from substantial load balance by discrete path control on a continuous base.
  • path control is implemented as an upgrade to a system platform which serves driving navigation aids, either as an external system which supports such a system platform to provide path controlled trips, or as a path control functionality within a system platform which serves driving navigation aids.
  • a platform which serves DNAs provides a model for an upgrade wherein an upgrade is implemented on such a system model either internally or externally.
  • path control Since the functionality of path control can be provided as an internal upgrade to a system platform that might not be distinguishable from the functionality of an external system upgrade, the term path control which is used by some embodiments may refer to both implementation possibilities.
  • Freedom degrees on the network which are used by path control to improve traffic flow, preferably by applying traffic load balancing, may refer to the marginal capacity (non occupied capacity) of links of a network and to the network topology, from which path control may take benefit, and which freedom degrees provide flexibility to dynamically assign paths for trips on the network according to current traffic, controlled traffic predictions and predicted demand of trips within a finite time horizon while considering fixed and dynamic traffic flow constraints on the network.
  • Demand of trips may be characterized at a high resolution by trip pairs ( positions to destinations) and/or at a limited resolution according to trip pairs among zones on the network; wherein aggregated trip pairs may relate to demand among zones with respect to preferably a wide sense stationary time interval. .
  • Predicted demand may refer to non yet served entries of trips to a network which preferably refer to pairs of zones, for example, path controlled trips with relation to a forward time interval associated with pairs of zones, or path controlled trips having for example forward time related interval associated with entries and/or exits related to links on a network, preferably major links.
  • the flexibility to distribute trips according to paths on the network refers to the flexibility to take benefit of different alternative paths to destinations and the flexibility to apply dynamic rerouting according to dynamically developing traffic.
  • dynamic rerouting refers to paths assigned to path controlled trips which under path control may dynamically be changed.
  • Said marginal capacity on a network which determines freedom degrees on the network, refers to non occupied capacities on network links while considering current and controlled traffic predictions.
  • Controlled traffic predictions refer in this respect to simulated traffic predictions, applied for example by a DTA simulator, wherein a traffic simulator is fed by paths planned with the path control for path controlled trips, as part of an evaluation of potential effect on travel times on the network, and which evaluation may either lead to further planning of paths (corrections) and/or to assignment of paths to path controlled trips.
  • path controlled trips may provide a highly valuable solution not just due to the ability to apply more reliable predictive control but also due to the ability to get more traffic and demand related information from path controlled trips, which in turn enables to synthesize by a DTA simulator, having non linear time varying flow models, higher quality of time dependent traffic flow to support predictive path control on network flow.
  • the goal should be to maximize usage of path controlled trips which increases the reliability of the information about demand of trips and about traffic flow enabling to apply a more robust control on path controlled trips, while reducing dependency of predictive path control on estimation of demand of trips according to limited traffic data trough DTA models.
  • the higher the quality and coverage of real time demand and traffic related data the lower is the sensitivity of model based demand estimation and DTA calibration to real time errors, and, as a result, the higher is the robustness of predictive path control.
  • a more robust predictive path control which enables a more effective traffic load balance due to high usage of path controlled trips increases the available capacity on the network, due to reduction of travel times on the network as a result of the tendency to maximize the potential contribution of dynamic rerouting by predictive path control applying traffic load balancing.
  • a Dynamic Traffic Assignment (DTA) simulation platform which may enable controlled traffic predictions for a predictive path control typically includes demand and supply traffic models.
  • quasi-dynamic traffic simulator which is a simplified simulator for dynamic assignments.
  • a typical DTA simulator is comprised of several sub models and which sub models are associated with two main categories of DTA models, and which main categories are the Demand Model and the Supply Model mentioned above.
  • a DTA according to different accuracy levels, may include but not be limited to:
  • a demand Model which divides the network into zones among which trip pairs are assigned, and expanded for real time traffic predictions by a demand prediction model for zone to zone demand of trips.
  • a demand prediction model which expands the demand model is aimed at enabling real time demand predictions according to past demand data, possibly with the support of historical data which may apply statistical prediction models associated possibly with pattern recognition methods for differential statistical demand prediction.
  • Advanced demand model may include demand control models such as road toll and early/late trip departure recommendations in association with a demand prediction model.
  • a supply Model which models the network traffic flow development, and which includes submodels which are, but not limited to, road network characteristics at a level of links and intersections, routes and route choice model for the non controlled paths according to classes of vehicles, plans of traffic control means such as traffic lights and variable signals, and, with high resolution DTA, also intra link related traffic model such as lane changes and behavior related car following having a as potential to be expanded to intra and inter link control models such as, but not limited to, vehicle to vehicle communication effects considered to be applied with autonomous vehicles and/or with Cooperative Intelligent Transportation Systems.
  • DTA models are used mainly for traffic planning purposes, such as road network planning and traffic lights control planning, while some real time experiments use such DTAs for traffic predictions.
  • Such DTAs may provide prime platforms for required expansions which may further support real time controlled traffic predictions for predictive path control with advanced traffic supply and demand models.
  • Advanced expansions may include but not limited to:
  • a demand model expanded by demand control which may include sub models such as, for example, road toll effects and/or effects of prescheduled trip requests/recommendations if, for example, prescheduled route recommendations/requests are allowed by a driving navigation service, and/or expansions related to methods, systems and apparatus described by the present invention
  • a supply model expanded by sub models such as for example vehicle to vehicle communication effects on traffic development enabling for example autonomous vehicles to be included in DTA based traffic predictions and/or, for example, vehicle to vehicle and/or vehicle to infrastructure communication effects on traffic development, to be included in DTA based traffic predictions, and which such communication and respective applications may be considered for example with or without deployment of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) or Cooperative ITS.
  • ITS Intelligent Transportation Systems
  • models of such advanced control systems may expand less advanced DTA simulation platforms used typically for planning purposes and/or for traffic predictions under conditions of less advanced traffic control.
  • Traffic predictions based on traffic models are mandatory to apply model predictive control which predictive path control is based on.
  • model predictive control is based on.
  • Such approach requires means to calibrate a DTA in substantial real-time in order to enable a DTA to apply traffic predictions, wherein the calibration should preferably be applied using state estimation methods.
  • State estimation may serve advanced control applications and comprises variety of known methods to support model based predictions, such as Kaman Filter (KF) based methods to support non linear systems by for example Extended Kaman Filter (EKF) and Unscented Kaman Filter (UKF), as well as Monte Carlo based methods such as particle filters and EnKF, just to mention some of them.
  • KF Kaman Filter
  • EKF Extended Kaman Filter
  • UDF Unscented Kaman Filter
  • Monte Carlo based methods such as particle filters and EnKF, just to mention some of them.
  • Such methods are aimed at enabling to track hidden variables which under simplified description (which is further elaborated) refer to the demand model and preferably also to varying parameters of the supply model of a DTA and which such methods are aimed at enabling substantially real-time calibration of a DTA.
  • the demand prediction model is the process model
  • the supply model is the measurement model
  • traffic information represent the field measurements in term of state estimation
  • the demand hidden variables and possibly also parameters of the supply model are the variables of the state vector in terms of state estimation.
  • path controlled trips i.e., dominance of the DTA stochastic route choice model and hidden demand variables
  • the issue starts with a need for huge computation power even for a quite limited prediction resolution with respect to the size of the demand state vector (time related entries associated with destinations of trips) which the non linear and stochastic nature of the supply converts the issue to a barrier while considering to take benefit of predictive path control for a city size network.
  • some innovative methods are suggested to reduce complexity and non reliability issues associated with high dimension non linear time varying state and parameter estimation which may enable to reduce issues associated with the TDA calibration at substantial real time and which such methods improve and generalize the solution in comparison to some limited concrete cases which exclude typical traffic in a city wide network.
  • a major step towards a possibility to obtain such an objective is to motivate high usage of path controlled trips and coordination of such trips. This may minimize or even eliminate the issue associated with calibration of a DTA and enable high or even full control on the traffic distribution as further elaborated.
  • Another major step towards efficient traffic predictions is to encourage prescheduled trips associated with encouraged usage of path controlled trips which may reduce also ambiguities associated with statistical predictions of the demand and which along the range of a prediction time horizon may reduce the demand resolution (zone to zone demand of trips). With lack of sufficient prescheduled trips, the further the time interval in the horizon of the prediction the lower is the resolution (longer time intervals are required in further time intervals in order to maintain the same level of statistical errors). Prescheduled trips may reduce in this respect errors associated with predictions of demand applied by statistical models, which for example may use time series analysis preferably supported, for example, by historical patterns to linearize time series behavior by performing time series analysis for the differences between similar historical and current patterns (possibly including respective traffic patterns). As a result the resolution of relatively long predictions may be increased and respectively the efficiency of the predictive control will increase or even become fully exploited.
  • Motivation to use prescheduled path controlled trips may be applied based on differential privileges according to which higher privilege may be provided to prescheduled path controlled trip than a privilege provided to non prescheduled path controlled trip.
  • a service which applies prescheduled trips may be described from a point of view of a user software application installed on, for example, a Smartphone. Activation of such a software application, at a time or recurrently, should be associated with a certain vehicle, for example, according to its registration number.
  • Such an application includes a functionality enabling to transmit a request for prescheduled path controlled trip, according to a position to a destination, and to receive a response to the request.
  • a response includes one or more recommendations for departure times, associated preferably with estimated travel time savings, of which one recommendation is selected and accordingly transmitted as a confirmed selection.
  • a departure position may be identified automatically or be specified by the user.
  • automatic identification may be applied according to the position of the Smartphone from which the request is transmitted, if applicable, or according to stored position of the vehicle on the Smartphone, if applicable, or according to stored position of the vehicle which is transmitted from a service center which tracks the vehicle position, if applicable.
  • Specified departure position may further be an option according to which a street name and number of a building are fed to the software application by a user.
  • Generation of conditions for high usage of path controlled trips on a network may enable to increase the level of the control on the distribution of the traffic and hence the potential exploitation of the traffic demand to supply ratio on the network, which includes drastic reduction or even elimination of the high dimension non linear time varying and stochastic state estimation issues.
  • generating motivation for high usage while applying a method for coordination of paths by predictive path control enabling further fairness in path assignment under predictive path control, may encourage high usage of path controlled trips.
  • the higher the share of path controlled trips the less dependence on the stochastic part of the supply model is obtained as well as the lower could be the coefficient variations of the estimation (due to stochastic data and models) and the bias (due to non linear models) in zone to zone demand estimation (if estimation is still needed), and as a result high performance of predictive path control may be applied (with high usage of path controlled trips) or even the highest performance control (with full usage of path controlled trips) may be achieved.
  • increase in the share of path controlled trips may be obtained by providing free of charge road toll (hereinafter the term toll refers also to road toll) for path controlled trips in order to encourage usage of path controlled trips.
  • increase in the share of path controlled trips may be obtained by providing free of charge toll or toll discount for path controlled trips to encourage usage of path controlled trips.
  • Implementation of such approach introduces an innovative strategy which has near term and long term aspects that may enable to realize predictive traffic optimization on the network gradually, with minimum or even with no potential objections from the public.
  • Such approach may start with robust privacy preserving free of charge road-tolling, provided as privilege to encourage usage of path controlled trips by robust predictive path control, and according to a need, further enabling to apply discounted tolling in order to control freedom degrees on the network, by dilution of the demand, which in turn enables ultimate predictive optimization of traffic flows on the network.
  • Such approach may further be expanded to apply authentic and anonymous requests for prescheduled trips which enable more accurate optimization of traffic on the network, for longer controlled time horizons, in comparison to statistical predictions associated with zone to zone demand.
  • Privacy preserving toll charging is a key factor that should be considered in order to avoid raised potential claim that trip details might be vulnerable to non authorized access which is the case with exposure of trip details to a toll charging center.
  • an innovative robust privacy preservation is introduced which enables to hide trip details from a toll charging center while enabling to apply tolling transactions by an upgrade to a relatively low cost tolling concept.
  • a GNSS tolling concept which introduces a relatively low cost tolling platform may be upgraded by innovative robust privacy preserving tolling transactions for wide coverage as described further with some embodiments.
  • free of charge toll privilege there is no need for costly automatic car plate identification traps to be widely deployed since there is no real incentive to drivers to bypass free of charge tolling while being guided according to most efficient path controlled trips.
  • the GNSS tolling vehicular platform may provide a platform to support further robust predictive path control based on authentic vehicular related data which may be received by a path control system and which may include: real time updates of authentic anonymous predictive demand for trips (which complements anonymous provision of paths to path controlled trips according to anonymous requests by dynamically determined communication procedure with certified vehicular units), and real time updates of authentic anonymous progress of trips (based on anonymous provision of paths to path controlled trips according to anonymous requests by dynamically determined communication procedure with certified vehicular units).
  • a complementary innovative element which may complement cooperative driving, applied by privileged path controlled trips, is cooperative safe driving on road networks which its efficiency is dependent on massive usage of matured autonomous vehicles and which according some embodiments may be applied as an expansion to a privileged path control system and/or as independent privileged cooperative safe driving.
  • free of charge toll or toll discount are provided as privilege to encourage usage of autonomous vehicles which are equipped with apparatus enabling cooperative positioning of moving vehicles, wherein positions and preferably also short term predicted positions, which are determined by each vehicle, are exchanged among vehicles by vehicle to vehicle communication.
  • high density of such vehicles may be generated on the network by said privileges to usage of automatic driving, enabling robust cooperative safe driving according to current and anticipated relative distances among vehicles which such vehicles may calculate according said current and anticipated exchanged positions.
  • the robustness of cooperative safe driving may further be improved by fusion of direct relative distance measurements between a vehicle and vehicles in its vicinity, applied by each vehicle of a plurality of autonomous vehicles, and disseminating by each vehicle to other vehicles (in its vicinity) the measurements through vehicle to vehicle communication.
  • This enables fusion of complementary pairs of measurements by each vehicle in order to reduce potential error of a single measurement. Fusion in this respect may apply weighted least square based methods, preferably expanded to predictive fusion which determine dynamic relative distances among vehicles according to predictive positions which may be applies according to in-vehicle calibrated model based motion simulator which may determine predicted weights.
  • Such approach under high density of autonomous vehicles on a network may further enable to reduce costs of sensors which may count on fusion of multiple measurements from multiple sensors installed on different vehicles.
  • Privileges to encourage cooperative safe driving are preferably combined with privileges to encourage usage of path controlled trips, according to some embodiments, for example, by providing privilege which discriminates between contribution to safe driving and efficient driving. Since automatic driving of autonomous vehicles depends on a DNA it is natural to expect that free of charge road toll or toll discount may be applied at some stage to encourage usage of autonomous vehicles due to both safe and efficient usage of road network. Entitlement to privilege at such a stage requires indication about usage of apparatus which enables said cooperative safe driving which, for example, usage of automatic driving mode may provide.
  • Exceptional situations may include, according to some embodiments, inability of an autonomous vehicle or a driver to be guided by path controlled trips due to malfunction in the communication with in-vehicle apparatus or due to malfunction in in-vehicle apparatus which prevents usage of path controlled trips.
  • tolerated reaction may further include, according to some embodiments, provision of toll privileges to non full usage of path control along a trip and/or to a number and/or to a percentage of trips and/or to a portion of trips which were not using or obeying to path control during a predetermined aggregated period of time such as for example during a certain period of time in a month or a week.
  • toll discount, or free of charge toll are applied by using a toll charging unit installed in the car, or by emulated functionality supported partially or fully by one or more in-vehicle devices, and which unit or functionality of the unit has interaction with an in vehicle DNA and with a toll charging center, as well with means through which vehicle authentication can be determined by the installed unit.
  • An independent vehicular toll charging unit is a dedicated in-vehicle (on board) toll unit, enabling according to some embodiments to guarantee secured toll charging independently of other in- vehicle devices, preferably by enabling in-vehicle toll charges or free of charge tolls to be managed without exposure of trip details to a toll charging center while reporting to a toll charging center about the sum of calculated toll or free of charge toll.
  • the independence of toll charging unit of other in- vehicle devices prevents exposure of the toll charging unit data and processes from non authorized access.
  • a toll charging unit or its functionality may preferably include, but not be limited to include: vehicle positioning means such as a GNSS receiver; communication apparatus and processes enabling to receive path related trips used with a DNA to guide a driver or an autonomous vehicle on a road network; processing and memory apparatus as well as processes to manage in-vehicle said secured toll charges according to said guiding path received from a DNA and tracked positions of the vehicle according to in-vehicle positioning means, and according to pre-stored data and processes to calculate toll charges or to decide on free of charge toll; process enabling to report to a toll charging center about toll charges which include but not limited to vehicle authentication data which is securely stored on the toll charging unit memory, preferably on nonvolatile memory and preferably stored by an authorized entity and by authorized apparatus and processes; communication apparatus and processes to interact with a toll charging center with respect to toll charging and/or free of charge toll, preferably including a process enabling frequent monitoring of connectivity of the toll charging unit,
  • An alternative implementation of a toll charging unit functionality can be based on a software and/or hardware add-on to one or more in-vehicle devices which provide a non independent toll charging unit with full functionality upgrade, preferably using one or more in-vehicule platforms (hereinafter device and vehicular platform may be used interchangeably) for example by communication of such non independent toll charging unit with complementary software and hardware of in-vehicle devices or by integration/emulation of a toll charging unit functionality with/by an in-vehicle device.
  • implementation of a toll charging unit which is an independent unit, may include hardware and software means that a non independent unit may be equipped with access to one or more of them.
  • Positioning means including but not limited to: GNSS based positioning using a positioning means such as a GPS receiver and/or Galileo receiver and/or GLONASS receiver and/or BeiDou receiver and/or Compass navigation system receiver and/or differential GPS receiver and/or GNSS receiver supported by data from an augmentation system such as EGNOS and/or a positioning means such as differential GPS RTK and/or GNSS receiver supported by map matching, or a positioning means such as localization means on roads used to see beyond sensing with high definition/resolution road and/or lane maps wherein localization means may include sensors such as Laser scanner(s) (LIDAR) and/or radar(s) and/or camera(s) supported by computer vision estimation methods to determine the location of a vehicle on road maps typically on high resolution maps serving autonomous vehicles.
  • LIDAR Laser scanner(s)
  • radar radar
  • camera(s) supported by computer vision estimation methods to determine the location of a vehicle on road maps typically on high resolution maps serving autonomous vehicles.
  • Computation means including CPU, memory and non volatile memory
  • In-vehicle (on-board) communication means to communicate with a DNA application which may require wired or wireless communication and which in case of wireless communication may enable, for example, communication with a DNA application installed on a smart phone and/or with an in- dash DNA or with a DNA integrated in an in-car entertainment system (also known as in-vehicle infotainment system); and which wireless communication may be implemented through for example Bluetooth communication and/or Wi-Fi and/or through for example in car communication means enabling to communicate with in-vehicle devices using communication means such as available with connected cars which further enable to utilize by a toll charging unit in-vehicle available resources and data required with a toll charging unit functionality including, but not limited to, the ability to communicate with an in-car entertainment system which usually includes a DNA, with devices including vehicle positioning means, with devices including computation resources, with on board means which stores vehicle authentication related data such as for example certified data source for vehicle identification number and/or vehicle registration number, with device which may serve directly or indirectly as a means for Internet communication
  • Communication means to communicate with a toll charging center or a toll charging center functionality indirectly, through for example communication means installed on the toll charging unit enabling the toll charging unit to communicate with connected car wireless communication means and/or enabling to communicate with in-vehicle Internet communication means, or for example, with a Smartphone Bluetooth communication means and/or, for example, with in-vehicle Dedicated Short Range Communication (DSRC) used with Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) for vehicle to infrastructure and possibly also vice-versa (infrastructure to vehicle).
  • DSRC Dedicated Short Range Communication
  • ITS Intelligent Transportation Systems
  • time related positions of a vehicle for toll charging can be determined according to road side infrastructure locations rather than by in-vehicle positioning, and in such a case a GPS receiver may be used with a toll charging unit as an option, for example, to improve resolution of vehicle positioning for non-dense DSRC road side infrastructure and/or to increase limited coverage of DSRC through other communication network(s) such as cellular mobile networks.
  • communication means to read vehicle authentication data through for example connected car wireless communication means enabling to communicate with in-vehicle means which store vehicle authentication related data such as for example certified data source for vehicle identification number and/or vehicle registration number, or , for example, to receive vehicle identification number through on-board diagnostic connector or on-board diagnostic port in the vehicle or through a split of an access to on board diagnostic port, and which authentication data is transmitted when communicating with a toll charging center with respect to a road toll transaction.
  • vehicle authentication related data such as for example certified data source for vehicle identification number and/or vehicle registration number
  • vehicle authentication related data such as for example certified data source for vehicle identification number and/or vehicle registration number
  • communication means through which data related to a vehicle operation mode, entitling the vehicle with road toll privileges, is updated indirectly through, for example, connected car wireless communication means enabling to communicate with in-vehicle means which stores data related to vehicle operation mode such as, for example, certified usage of path controlled trips and/or other modes such as contribution of a vehicle to safely driving and/or to safe and efficient distance kept from other vehicles in its vicinity especially useful with automatic driving mode of autonomous vehicle, or directly, with devices in which such data is stored, and which indication of such data is transmitted when communicating with a toll charging center with respect to a road toll transaction.
  • data related to vehicle operation mode such as, for example, certified usage of path controlled trips and/or other modes
  • contribution of a vehicle to safely driving and/or to safe and efficient distance kept from other vehicles in its vicinity especially useful with automatic driving mode of autonomous vehicle, or directly, with devices in which such data is stored, and which indication of such data is transmitted when communicating with a toll charging center with respect to a road toll transaction.
  • An alternative to upgrading a non independent toll charging unit by complementary means may use a vehicular platform to be upgraded by toll charging vehicular unit functionality which may refer but not be limited to vehicular platform such as, for example: an in-car entertainment system; a GNSS tolling on-board unit applied for example with road pricing for tracks in Europe; sensor(s) based localization of a vehicle on a road map (used for example by autonomous vehicles for positioning a vehicle on in-vehicle high resolution road map); a driving navigation aid (DNA), including but not limited to a DNA based on a satnav or a DNA used for example with an autonomous vehicle; a black box installed on a vehicle to track driver behavior , for example for insurance related applications; a green box installed on a vehicle to track driver behavior; an Advanced Driver Assistance System (ADAS) which for example may refer to ADAS based on camera(s) and/or radar(s) and/or other sensors for warning drivers and/or a control system using such sensors to support various levels of automated vehicle classification such as Level
  • Such vehicular devices provide platforms for an upgrade by a toll charging vehicular unit functionality to implement an application which motivates the use of path controlled trips, for example, by free of charge road toll or by provision of discount to toll charge.
  • road toll might not be the only means to motivate usage of path controlled trips.
  • mass usage of autonomous vehicles on the network should create a need to apply path controlled trips on networks in order to at least prevent non desirable traffic development as a result of non coordinated guidance, but this by itself can' t guarantee high utilization of a network which suffers from high traffic load due to high demand of trips, and for which case there is a need to also dilute traffic by for example a road toll charging system, and which free of charge toll at early stages and toll discount at advanced stages may enable.
  • path controlled trips usage supported by traffic dilution should be considered according to needs.
  • usage of path controlled trips contribute by itself to traffic dilution and which traffic dilution on the network increases with the increase of the share of path controlled trips in the traffic and which toll charging may further increase the dilution according to needs (if path controlled trips are not sufficient to generate desirable flow under highly traffic loaded network).
  • Some other vehicular platforms which according to some demonstrative embodiments of the invention may be upgraded in order to motivate path controlled trips usage, are black boxes and/or green boxes used to evaluate the level of entitled privilege for discounts in insurance policy price for cars, which price is determined according to various parameters and which parameters may include behavior of drivers and/or the annual mileage of a vehicle.
  • additional discount to insurance policy price may be obtained by a black box or a green box indirectly if efficient path control is used.
  • Path controlled trips which may reduce mileage, contributes to discount privilege according to mileage parameter supported by black boxes and green boxes records.
  • a condition to obtain discount by a black box or green box is to contribute to traffic improvement by path control and which such a condition may motivate usage of path controlled trips.
  • Such an approach may serve government authorities which, for example, through one authority control on the cost of insurance prices relates to human injuries in case of car accidents may be applied, while through another authority responsibility for traffic improvement may further be applied.
  • increase in usage of efficient path controlled trips may have progressive contribution to trip time reductions on the network, and hence to risk reduction as well, which may motivate promotion of path controlled trips by government authorities and insurance companies.
  • this approach by itself can't guarantee high utilization of a network which suffers from high traffic load and for which case there is a need to dilute traffic by for example a road toll charging system and which free of charge toll at early stages, and toll discount at later stages, may motivate path controlled trips usage supported by traffic dilution according to needs.
  • toll charging unit may either refer to a dedicated unit or to an upgraded vehicular platform which enables functionality of a toll charging unit, and which software and/or hardware that are used to upgrade a said vehicular platform are subject to implementation decision to take benefit of software and/or hardware elements which in common can be used by a said vehicular platform and by the toll charging unit functionality.
  • toll charging unit used by descriptive embodiments of the invention may refer to both implementation possibilities although the unit in this respect might be reduced to software implementation level.
  • path controlled trips which are encouraged to be used by free of charge road toll or by toll discount, are supported during a trip by a toll charging application, preferably installed within a toll charging unit, which record positions of the vehicle at an acceptable frequency, using preferably non volatile memory. Records of positions which may be related just to selective roads or selective parts of roads (in case that the toll charging application and data apply selective records) are used as a reference for comparison with records of positions of trips that according to path control were recommended for a trip, for example through a DNA application. Trips which are found to be following routes according to path control and which related positions of trips were preferably transferred to the toll charging unit installed in the vehicle, for example from the DNA vehicular application, will be entitled to receive discount or not being charged by toll.
  • the toll charging unit may transmit to a toll charging center positions which characterize a trip and which trip or part of it may be entitled for a privilege of toll discount or free of charge toll such as in case that the path control is used with the trip.
  • trips which are entitled to be free of charge can be saved from being transmitted to a toll charging center for privacy preservation reasons and can be erased from user facilities.
  • encouraging usage of path controlled trips by entitling free of charge privacy preservation toll includes, for example, recording at an acceptable frequency positions of a vehicle during a trip by a toll charging application installed for example on a said toll charging unit, in order to acceptably characterize a trip for a possible need to charge toll if obedience to recommended path control trip was not performed.
  • the DNA application will preferably transfer trip positions that characterize the path controlled trip to the toll charging unit during, or after the trips ends.
  • the toll charging unit will use a trip comparison process to compare its position records with the path controlled position records and determine whether the trip is found to be substantially the same.
  • positions which characterize a non charged trip will be erased from the memory of a toll charging unit, that is, there is no need to keep such records in the toll charging unit, if there is no need to involve external facility such as a toll charging center which toll charges.
  • trip related data which are transferred from a DNA application to a toll charging unit will be authenticated as data which relate to a path controlled trip tracked by a toll charging unit by the support of a toll center related trip authentication process, which is an authorized trip authentication process, and which process may preferably be a common process related to a path control system and to a toll charging center; wherein, a non source identifying path controlled trip related characteristic is used in common by a toll charging unit and a DNA, preferably before and during a trip, and wherein the trip related characteristic is constructed of a number or characters, or a combination of both of them; and wherein, generation of the trip related characteristic is performed according to some embodiments preferably by the trip authentication process, and preferably as part of a request for a path controlled trip; and wherein according to some embodiments authentication is based on reception of the trip related characteristic by the DNA and by the toll charging unit independently under the control of a toll center related trip authentication process by an acceptable independence.
  • independence may be implemented by using independent communication channels by the DNA and by the toll charging unit, or by at least acceptably independent applications using a common communication channel with the trip authentication process.
  • Independent reception of a common trip related characteristic may enable to check by a toll charging unit authenticated data received by the toll charging unit from a DNA, such as trip related positions associated with authentic trip related characteristic which is common to the DNA and to the respective toll charging unit that serve a path controlled trip.
  • a trip related characteristic may be generated by a DNA related process or by the toll charging unit related process and be transferred for an authentication of common path controlled trip data, from one to the other, through an authorized trip authentication process.
  • time synchronized positions can be taken by a toll charging unit and by a path controlled DNA application during a trip, wherein synchronization can be made according to predetermined procedure which facilitates common positioning for a trip comparison process.
  • a Global Navigation Satellite System receiver such as a GPS receiver, can be used as a common positioning and timing source for the DNA application and for the toll charging unit.
  • synchronization can be made between a DNA application and a toll charging unit, by using a common positioning means such as a GPS receiver installed in a toll charging unit, in order to reduce positioning and timing ambiguity.
  • predetermined location based records of positions, for the comparison may be generated by a process which guarantees higher match between the records, wherein predetermined positions on a road map are used to determine locations for positioning records on a road map, which is available to the path controlled DNA application and to a toll charging unit application, and which positions and respective times are recorded as a result of passing a predetermined position during a trip.
  • a road map wherein access to the map is available to a toll charging unit.
  • a road map which may or may not include the positioning records with respective attributes of predetermined locations, may include updated attributes for time dependent toll charging values assigned to roads. Updates may be applied either by access to such common data on a remote server or by receiving such respective data.
  • such charging values may enable on board (in vehicle) calculation of toll charge amount per trip, preferably by a toll charging unit which is authorized to convert records of positions that characterize trips - into a toll charging amount, according to a road map having attributes of charging values for passing roads or road segments, for example according to daily time intervals.
  • the attributes of charging values may enable to use different charge values for different hours and for different roads used during a trip.
  • said different types of trips may refer to trips or part of trips that followed assigned path to path controlled trip and trips that were not using or were not following paths assigned to path controlled trips .
  • the road map and respective updates are received by the toll charging unit, for example, by reading updates from a remote database server which may be part of the toll charging center, for example, directly through communication means of the toll charging unit, or, for example, indirectly through Bluetooth which communicates with a Smartphone and which Smartphone communicates with a database server.
  • a remote database server which may be part of the toll charging center, for example, directly through communication means of the toll charging unit, or, for example, indirectly through Bluetooth which communicates with a Smartphone and which Smartphone communicates with a database server.
  • the amount after determination of the accumulated amount of the toll charge, by a toll charging unit, the amount will be transmitted to the toll charging center according to a predetermined procedure which identifies the car but does not have to expose trip details while enabling toll charging.
  • Such privacy preservation may support toll charging in case of toll discount and/or charging toll of non path controlled trips used to encourage path controlled trips, including cases of charging toll without relation to free of charge path controlled trips or discount for path controlled trips.
  • a GNSS tolling system based on car number plate identification may be used to transfer time related location of identified vehicle to for example a toll charging center.
  • interaction with a respective toll charging unit may be activated for example by a toll charging unit, wherein such activation may at least determine whether a toll charging unit was active in the identified vehicle at the time the car plate identification was activated.
  • toll charging unit may be activated at any time determined by the system according to respective policies. If the result is that there was no response from a toll charging unit, or there is no associated toll charging unit within the identified vehicle, then a toll charge enforcement procedure may be activated, enabling a further possible procedure that should exclude enforced toll charging in case of a failure to interact with a toll charging unit for which the charged driver has no responsibility.
  • a GNSS tolling system based on car number plate identification may be deployed for some of the roads, that is, not all roads on a network may be monitored by such infrastructure, in order to reduce cost of infrastructure which may relate for example to roadside infrastructure.
  • enforced toll may still be effective if high toll charge is applied to discourage non path controlled trips while encouraging path controlled trips by free of charge toll or toll discount with the support of a complementary toll charging unit.
  • said toll enforcement, as well as path controlled trip usage toll privileges with privacy preserving toll charging functionalities described with vehicular toll charging unit may upgrade a GNSS toll charging system to include such functionalities wherein GNSS positioning may be substituted by sensor localization on a map in case of for example autonomous vehicles.
  • DSRC system can be used to perform interaction with a toll charging unit if DSRC in car units are used by cars to communicate between a toll charging center and toll charging units.
  • DSRC may provide a substitution to car plate identification functionality as described above.
  • Privacy preserving path control supported by privacy preserving free of charge toll or toll discount, may reduce reluctance to use path controlled trips and as a result high usage of path controlled trips which is expected to be developed, may enable to generate high degrees of freedom and to apply efficient network traffic load balancing being supported by:
  • Improved traffic mapping constructed by enriched anonymous position related data tracking of vehicles during their trips which may according to some embodiments feed, for example, a traffic mapping process within a path control system or, for example, a traffic mapping process within a functionality of a path control system which for example upgrades a driving navigation system platform, or a traffic mapping process within an external traffic mapping means which serves a path control system or a said functionality of path control system, wherein external traffic mapping means may include a traffic mapping process within a driving navigation system platform or within a toll charging center, which may feed a path control system or a path control system functionality with mapped traffic, and wherein the source of positions related data may be a toll charging units, or a functionality of a toll charging unit which upgrades said vehicular platforms, and/or a DNA or a functionality of DNA integrated within a vehicular system platform such as an autonomous vehicle control platform and/or in-car entertainment system which may include functionalities such as for example a DNA and/or in-car wireless communication such as LAN and/or Internet connectivity and//or
  • anonymous position related data are transmitted from toll charging units to a path control system, According to some embodiments, anonymous position related data are transmitted from toll charging units to a mapping means which serves a path control system. According to some embodiments, anonymous position related data are transmitted from DNA to a path control system, According to some embodiments, anonymous position related data are transmitted from DNA to a mapping means which serves a path control system. According to some embodiments anonymous position related data are received by a path control system from a driving navigation service platform or from any system which serves either said vehicular platforms or said upgraded vehicular platforms or from both systems.
  • the source for positions and destinations related data may be toll charging units or a functionality of a toll charging unit which upgrades said vehicular platforms, and/or DNA, and/or a functionality of DNA integrated within a vehicular system platform such as an autonomous vehicle control platform and/or in-car entertainment system of a connected car, and/or in-dash DNA and/or a DNA applications on smart phones, and/or a Smartphone (independent of a DNA application), and/or said vehicular platforms which can be upgraded by toll charging unit functionality and which a toll changing unit is fed by trip destination originated for example with the support of a DNA and transmitted to a toll charging unit or to a toll charging unit functionality.
  • a vehicular system platform such as an autonomous vehicle control platform and/or in-car entertainment system of a connected car, and/or in-dash DNA and/or a DNA applications on smart phones, and/or a Smartphone (independent of a DNA application), and/or said vehicular platforms which can be upgraded by toll charging unit functionality and which a toll changing
  • anonymous trip related position and destination data are transmitted from toll charging units to a path control system. According to some embodiments, anonymous trip related position and destination data are transmitted from toll charging units to a mapping means which serves a path control system. According to some embodiments, anonymous trip related position and destination data are transmitted from DNA to a path control system, According to some embodiments anonymous trip related position and destination data are received by a path control system from a driving navigation service platform or from a system which serves said upgraded vehicular platforms.
  • Performance of traffic load balancing has direct and indirect aspects. That is, traffic load balancing (which may refer also to the term load balancing) performed by a path control system, in case that path controlled trips are taking only a share in the trips on the network, contributes indirectly to the improvement of the entire traffic on a road network. To be more precise, even with a small percentage of usage of path controlled trips on the network it should be expected that the contribution of path control to aggregated travel time saving on the network will be significant.
  • a system and method of path control may be considered from a wide perspective, which preferably includes the following aspects.
  • An operational aspect may refer to: An objective to create motivation to use path controlled trips, that is, to create conditions for potential maximization of path control performance on the network which enables to take benefit of the highest degrees of freedom to utilize the network potential in order to serve demand of trips on a network with the highest traffic flow.
  • the objective is obtained by a "carrot and stick” approach which uses toll charge discounts or free of charge toll to motivate usage of path controlled trips.
  • toll discount provided as a privilege to motivate usage of path controlled trips, may be justified for a second stage in which reducing motivation to generate trips on the network, or on parts of it, is added.
  • free of charge toll is implemented for improving traffic as means to motivate high path control usage even though toll charging means did not exist prior to the implementation of path control.
  • methods and system described above and hereinafter may be used as free of charge toll to motivate path control usage.
  • methods and system described above may be used with toll discount charges to motivate path control usage.
  • Another complementary objective to the objective to obtain efficient usage of a road network, by high usage of path controlled trips, is safe driving; wherein high density of usage of cooperative safe driving apparatus may generate robust safe driving at a stage when autonomous vehicles become mature.
  • an approach which may shorten the time to obtain both objectives may preferably apply provision of privileges to usage of cooperative safe driving apparatus as an expansion to a system and methods which may encourage high usage of path controlled trips for example by free of charge toll of toll discount.
  • provision of privileges may discriminate among usage safe driving apparatus, path controlled trips or both.
  • Acceptance aspect to facilitate operation aspects may refer to:
  • privacy preserving path control which need not identify the served vehicle by authentic data
  • privacy preserving toll charge which may use systems and methods as described above that hide trip related data, may be used to facilitate acceptance of at least the first stage for traffic improvement by path controlled trips.
  • privacy preserving path control on trips and privacy preserving toll charge are used to facilitate acceptance of the second stage for traffic improvement by path controlled trips.
  • Additional acceptance aspect refers to fairness in providing path controlled trip recommendations, which is further described in some embodiments.
  • path control is provided as an upgrade on top of one or more available services providing driving routes to driving navigation aids, wherein path controlled trips or corrected paths to routes planed by a driving navigation system service according to path control, are provided by a path control system to a driving navigation system service which serves the driving navigation aids with driving routes and are transmitted by the driving navigation system service to driving navigation aids.
  • the ability to provide path control service as an upgrade to a third party such as a commercial service provider which serves driving navigation aids with driving routes, and which may claim that routes which may be required to be transmitted to a path control system, even though anonymously, are exposing information that may be associated with complementary data which may enable to identify a requesting source for path controlled trip, and hence may not be accepted by DNA users.
  • a third party such as a commercial service provider which serves driving navigation aids with driving routes
  • routes which may be required to be transmitted to a path control system even though anonymously, are exposing information that may be associated with complementary data which may enable to identify a requesting source for path controlled trip, and hence may not be accepted by DNA users.
  • a third party such as a commercial service provider which serves driving navigation aids with driving routes
  • routes which may be required to be transmitted to a path control system even though anonymously, are exposing information that may be associated with complementary data which may enable to identify a requesting source for path controlled trip, and hence may not be accepted by DNA users.
  • Awareness and acceptance confirmation may be applied either through a DNA application which is served by path control, or through an entry to path control application that activates a third party DNA application, for example, an application installed on a Smartphone or on in dashboard DNA.
  • authentication of data associated with a toll charging unit may be confirmed by, for example, a checking procedure between a toll charging center and a toll charging unit which enables the toll charging center to be aware of whether an installed toll charging unit is still effective.
  • Installation removal may be protected by, for example, monitoring non removal of the toll charging unit by remote sampling of the toll changing unit.
  • authentication of a toll charging unit may use vehicle identification number that can be read through on board diagnostic connector of a vehicle and be transmitted along with toll charging procedures as related data to a toll charging center.
  • disconnecting of a toll charging unit from on board diagnostic connector of a vehicle may be recorded on the memory of the toll charging unit, to provide indication on the need to reconfirm authorized use of the toll charging unit by, for example, sending a message to a toll charging center and/or to the driver through Bluetooth communication to a mobile application on a Smartphone or to an in dash DNA application or through any of said vehicular platforms upgraded by functionality of a toll charging unit.
  • reconfirmation can be performed by first reading a record of mileage of a vehicle from the toll charging unit, which can be initialized with an installation of a toll charging unit by an authorized entity according the mileage of the vehicle and maintained by the toll charging unit during trips. After a reading, a comparison between the toll charging mileage record and the current mileage of the vehicle is performed and if no difference or small difference within allowed range is found then the toll charging unit may be re-authorized preferably without any further intervention. According to some embodiments, the comparison is made by reading car mileage into the toll charging unit through the on board diagnostic connector, or according to other embodiments the comparison is made visually by an authorized entity.
  • methods which are used to satisfy an authority or an insurance company for authentication of data on a black box or a green box can be used for the authentication of data which serves a toll charging unit or a said vehicular platform upgraded by functionality of a toll charging unit.
  • privacy preserving checking of a bill which is related to details of trips can be applied upon privacy preserving toll charging.
  • the toll charging unit will keep the trips and charging details stored on its memory, wherein such details can be available to be read, for example, by a Smartphone or by in-dash DNA through Bluetooth communication between the Smartphone or in-dash DNA and a toll charging unit. With such access to charging details, and possibly according to a printed version of such details, an appeal can be submitted for a non accepted bill.
  • a toll charging unit functionality on a said upgraded vehicular platform enables to preserve privacy of trips records performed by toll charging unit functionality for a cost of elements which prevent remote access to trip data related to toll charging unit functionality or at least when it is not allowed by the keeper of privacy preserved trips related data.
  • Control technology related aspects may refer to:
  • a system and method which preferably apply a concept of predictive path control that coordinates paths of trips on a network to exploit freedom degrees on the network enabling to improve and preferably maximize traffic on the network, and which coordination of paths is supported by synthesis of controlled traffic predictions, preferably by DTA simulations performed according to planned paths associated with the coordination.
  • These technological aspects should preferably be complemented by prior mentioned aspects which refer to the operational and acceptance aspects in order to enable to maximize performance of predictive path control.
  • high acceptance of operational aspects may enable to generate high level degrees of freedom on the network for predictive path control, which coordinates paths, and which increases the performance of the path control due to high usage of path controlled trips.
  • demand of trips and possibly also parameters of the supply model of a DTA simulator are estimated respectively by/for DTA based predictions, for example, by state estimation method in which the DTA demand prediction model acts as a process model within the state estimation and the DTA supply model acts as the measurement model, wherein the state vector (hidden variables) of a state estimation method is the demand of trips represented by zone to zone (position to destination related zones) pairs.
  • state estimation method in which the DTA demand prediction model acts as a process model within the state estimation and the DTA supply model acts as the measurement model, wherein the state vector (hidden variables) of a state estimation method is the demand of trips represented by zone to zone (position to destination related zones) pairs.
  • a method and a system which may be used for coordinating paths on the network should preferably have an ability to generate and maintain traffic load balancing on the network, by utilizing current and predicted degrees of freedom on the network.
  • a method and a system apply distributed computation with calculation processes to coordinate paths associated with path controlled trips, to guide drivers and/or to guide autonomous vehicles on a road network by driving navigation aids.
  • Such a method and a system in order to be efficient, should encourage high percentage of usage of path controlled trips on a network, while path recommendations should preferably be provided on a fair basis, that is, taking into consideration that sets of paths which are planned intentionally to affect unfavorably on travel time of a trip, or travel times of part of trips, for the benefit of improving average trip times on the network, may discourage potential participation in such a path control service. Therefore, a coordination method should apply fairness constraint in order to enable wide acceptance, that is, from a point of view of drivers (and passengers) the interest of one driver should a-priori not be compromised for the benefit of others while cooperation may not be excluded with coordination processes.
  • a path control method which enables to satisfy fairness, and at the same time to improve traffic flow on the network, can be applied by a system in which preferably each of the controlled paths are associated with a computerized agent process which maintains the interest associated with individual path controlled trip (hereinafter the term agent process may refer also to agent) enabling each agent to act according to common acceptable rules.
  • agent process may refer also to agent
  • parallel computation by agent processes is applied on a path control system, for example, a said path planning layer supported by a said traffic prediction layer, wherein each of the agents may according to a predetermined simplified procedure receive or have access to predictive path control related data which include but not limited to:
  • the concept of applying fairness in coordinated path assignments for load balancing on the network may preferably allow, under control, greedy as well as cooperative calculation of paths by agents according to the stage of the trip and the stage of the path control.
  • a cooperative process which is aimed at enabling a gradual mitigation of potential overloads due to potential negative effects of planned path on the network, should also enable fairness considerations but with such a process fairness may be considered from a point of view of the result of convergence of the set of paths to apply load balance or at least to apply a more balanced traffic.
  • tight path control may enable to maintain coordination of paths which apply both fairness and load balance on the network.
  • Coordination control processes which are aimed at converging the traffic toward substantial load balance may include but not be limited to: synchronization of processes preferably applied by distributed computation performed by agents to plan sets of coordinated paths, traffic prediction feedbacks to evaluate effects of planned sets of paths , traffic mapping, on-line calibration of a traffic simulation platform (DTA) according to the traffic mapping, coordination of input and output processes required with the planning of sets of paths for path-controlled trips.
  • DTA traffic simulation platform
  • agents may be applied as hardware to accelerate path calculations.
  • part or all path calculations are performed by agents installed on a DNA and which respective coordination control processes communicates with such driving navigation aids through for example mobile Internet.
  • coordination control processes under limited computation power, are load balancing control processes applying dynamic identification of relatively loaded links having high potential to negatively contribute to load balance according to current and controlled traffic predictions, and accordingly may further determine current highest priority links for gradual load balancing on a network, and which such links are referred to as relatively loaded links stored as a content of a load balancing priority layer.
  • Such a layer may support gradual load balancing by coordination control processes, for example, as part of a path planning system layer supported by the traffic prediction layer, and may be updated by currently anticipated relatively loaded links which may have potential negative effect on the load balancing.
  • Relatively loaded links associated with load balancing priority layer enable to substantially synchronize planning of paths for gradual load balancing of traffic which determination of relatively loaded links may include static and dynamic determination.
  • Static determination may refer to virtual determination of links as relatively loaded links, which links may not necessarily be loaded by traffic, wherein the aim of determination of such links as relatively loaded links should be a need to exclude links from network resources on which traffic load balancing is applied. Moreover, such links if are becoming relatively loaded links they should preferably be diluted as part of the load balancing. Such links may refer to network links on which traffic load balancing may, for example, disturb quality of life such as living or business defined areas and from which, as part of load balancing, traffic should be diverted to a part of a network on which load balancing is applied.
  • Dynamic determination of such links may be required under limited computation resources to apply, according some embodiments, gradual traffic load balancing on the network or part of the network on which load balancing is applied, and/or, according to some embodiments, to apply dynamic constraints on network links according to which traffic is diverted from relatively low capacity links towards a part of the network on which traffic is or planned to be concentrated for load balancing, as further elaborated.
  • determination of prioritized relatively loaded links in a load balancing priority layer may enable not to lose control on maintaining convergence toward load balance although the load balancing is less tight in such cases.
  • Examples of causes for which prioritization of relatively loaded links should preferably be used are: traffic development which may relate to an exceptional demand of trips (football game event etc,) and/or incident(s), and/or a situation that creates a need to evacuate or to dilute traffic on a link or on a certain part of a network, and/or any other high change in the dynamics of the traffic for which the given computation resources may be too weak to apply sufficient control on traffic load balancing, for example, by predictive coordinating path control system applying load balancing control processes associated with coordination control processes.
  • indication for a need to apply dynamic concentration of traffic may be an identified reduction, or identified anticipated reduction, in control on the traffic load balance which has but may not afford required frequency of control steps (cycles/phases or iterations/sub-phases) to generate or maintain substantial load balance on the network.
  • priority may be given, preferably temporarily, to coordination control processes on links having relatively high flow capacity potential on the network by diluting the non load balanced part of a network and concentrating the traffic on relatively high flow capacity links on the network.
  • an indication of inability to apply required frequency of control steps may be provided by evaluating updated data about the overall current and preferably also respective anticipated relatively loaded links on the network (not just links associated with the load balancing priority layer) during the load balancing. In this respect, if there is no decrease, or there is insufficient decrease, or otherwise an increase in the number and/or in the level of load associated with overall relatively loaded links, then, preferably according to a match with stored data, respective constraint is determined for desirable concentration of the traffic flow on restricted part of preferred links on the network.
  • a said match with stored data may refer to a match between time related patterns of traffic volume to capacity ratios of the current, and preferably respective recent and predicted traffic on links of the network, and time related stored data of traffic scenarios which contain patterns of traffic volume to capacity ratios on links of the network associated with stored desirable concentration of traffic on the network.
  • a search for a said match of current patterns with stored patterns may indicate on transition to desirable flow concentration on the network.
  • a match may be performed between a single pattern or preferably a set of patterns that represent the traffic dynamics and stored patterns associated with respective recommended concentration of traffic flow.
  • the stored data may be constructed by off-line simulations of coordination control processes that may prepare storage of desirable concentrations of the flow for certain patterns. The higher the resolution of the traffic simulation scenarios the richer is the storage, and the higher is the efficiency of such a method. In this respect, the increase in the resolution among the different scenarios of patterns may enable to find a closer match with the current pattern or a current set of patterns.
  • Such a method may be applied further for traffic development that allows to reduce limitations on the concentration of the traffic on the network with respect to computation resources which method applies coordination control processes under sufficient increase in the stability of load balance.
  • the search for a match will be due to, for example, identified reduction in the number, and preferably the level, of overall relatively loaded links on the network.
  • identification may be performed for example by tracking and comparing, along recent coordination control processes, the dynamics in the patterns of overall relatively loaded links.
  • stored patterns that are indicating on traffic dynamics may be prepared by off- line computer simulations applying coordination control processes for different dynamics in traffic.
  • the update of a storage with respect to relation between different dynamics in traffic and desirable use of a part of a network may be triggered by real time identified situations which may require off-line simulation to support future real time similar situations according to which the same or similar change in the concentration of the traffic on a part of a network may enable acceptable anticipated improvement in coordination control processes.
  • the update of the storage is a sort of a learning process which may progressively include more scenarios in said storage, and therefore it is expected that the said storage will be searched for a match that may sufficiently be acceptable according to similar characteristics of traffic, and which search for a match does not compel to find a full match if there is no such possibility.
  • different real time scenarios may share a common acceptable match to determine preferred concentration of traffic on part of the links of a network.
  • a new load balancing priority layer should be re-determined after determination of preferred links on the network on which traffic should preferably be concentrated and load balanced by coordination control processes.
  • the objective of dynamic increase or decrease in traffic concentration on a network is to enable optimal usage of the computation resources for acceptable control on the load balancing.
  • Such control should preferably maintain at the worst case short-term reaction to the main flow, by accelerating the convergence to substantial load balance on preferred part of the network, preferably on links that have relatively high traffic flow potential, and diverting traffic to such links if there are no further restrictions (e.g., a destination of a vehicle on a non preferred link).
  • the level of traffic concentration may be reduced to include, or gradually include, more preferred links (converted from non-preferred to preferred links) in order to enable traffic load balancing on a higher network resolution for further exploitation of the network by coordination control processes.
  • more effective control cycle i.e., phase
  • a control iteration i.e., sub-phase
  • coordination control processes for a cost of less effective usage of the network from time to time.
  • more effective control is a result of the ability to apply smaller effect of control steps (cycles/phases or iteration/sub-phase) with a non linear system (modeled by a DTA supply model).
  • diluted non-preferred links on the network may result in non obedience to paths of path controlled trips on the load balanced part of the network due to freedom degrees which are developing on another part of the network.
  • the incentive to use path controlled trips due to privileges such as free of charge toll or toll discount may maintain high obedience to controlled paths assigned to vehicles according to coordination control processes by applying negative incentive associated with the free of charge toll or toll discount on non preferred links on the network. In this respect free of charge toll or toll discount will not be provided on said non preferred links on the network.
  • coordination control processes are gradually applied for increasing percentage of usage of coordinating path controlled trips in the traffic, for example, in order to enable adaptation of freedom degrees applied with coordination control processes to ratios of time related demand to traffic supply on the network.
  • gradual calibration of freedom degrees may include for example said dynamic assignment of preferred links as well as a need to cope with shortening the convergence time of coordination control processes by consideration of insufficiently small but still effective control steps which have non linear effect on the network.
  • An issue in this respect may refer to non linear varying travel times on links as a result of varying volume to capacity ratios on different links having different lengths and different capacities that under coordination control processes should enable convergence toward load balance with respect to fair assignment of paths enabling to arrive to destinations through different alternatives (due to the need to obtain substantial load balance) according to coordination of path-controlled trips subject to some differentiating effect due to given limitations on the control.
  • Instability may include substantially stable oscillations and non-stable oscillations such as propagated and increasing oscillations on the network with respect to calculated paths, and for which, according to some embodiments, forced traffic distribution and refinements to control steps are applied for acceptable level of non oscillating calculated paths or otherwise for non acceptable oscillation of potential relatively loaded links on the network.
  • the percentage of non coordinated trips may preferably be guided according to path controlled trips which reflect route choice behavior model in a pre-coordinated traffic stage, preferably reflecting a typical set of routes which are possibly chosen from a calibrated stochastic DTA route choice model.
  • the use of the typical set of routes may enable acceptance of such approach and may guarantee robust traffic predictions based on predictive path assignments, wherein coordinating and non coordinating paths may be assigned randomly to path controlled trip users in order to maintain fairness in the type of the assignment along the time while maintaining a certain percentage of coordinating path controlled trips in the traffic.
  • obedience in order to enable obedience to path control in a preliminary stage in which a certain percentage of coordinating path controlled trips is maintained, obedience may be encouraged by entitling all path controlled trips with the same privilege, that is, provision of free of charge toll or toll discount, even though not all the controlled trips are coordinating path controlled trips.
  • the negative incentive associated with free of charge toll or toll discount may guarantee the obedience to any type of path associated with path controlled trip, and a said random assignment of coordinating and non coordinating path controlled trips may enable to maintain fairness in the assignment.
  • said negative incentive associated with free of charge toll or toll discount privileges is applied by preventing to obtain privilege for trip if the trip uses said non preferred links, that is, for example, when a non coordinating or coordinating path controlled trip by-passes preferred links on the network (on which traffic is concentrated or planned to be concentrated) by passing through non preferred links, if such links are not used by a trip as a destination.
  • an indication that a link is used as a destination may be a stoppage criterion which entitles a trip for a privilege, according to which a trip has to stop for a minimum time interval in order that a link will be considered as a destination.
  • indication about a stoppage under such privilege constraint may exclude a trip from being considered as passing through such links. This may be applied by tracking the trip details (preferably supported by privacy preserving privileged tolling as described with some embodiments) and determining accordingly, by for example a vehicular toll charging unit functionality (described with some embodiments), whether non preferred links were used as a destination or not.
  • privilege entitlement may be applied by free of charge toll or toll discount which includes a privilege entitling criterion according to which traveling from preferred links to non preferred links and back to preferred links require that a trip will be stopped for a minimum predetermined time on non preferred links.
  • Concentration of traffic by diverting the traffic from a higher network resolution to a lower network resolution may use respectively an encouraging or a discouraging means with calculations and assignments of paths.
  • a discouraging process may increase synthetically the travel time entry costs to non-preferred links from preferred links by a value that is higher than the real travel time costs, in order to dilute traffic on non preferred links by path planning processes which may include coordination control process for trips which pass through preferred links.
  • a decrease in the travel time entry cost value for such links may be applied by assigning real travel time costs or gradually decreasing synthetic costs for calculation of paths, wherein gradual change in the cost may enable moderate entry to such links in order to prevent potential traffic overloads during re-distribution of the traffic. For example, at the beginning of a redistribution the travel time costs can be lower in comparison to travel time costs in a more advanced distribution stage, wherein the travel time costs should converge to the real costs at the end of the re-distribution, preferably towards substantial load balance on preferred links.
  • this may be applied by not allowing changes in path calculations, due to small changes in travel time costs on the network, which for a small, or for non-meaningful, benefit may either overload the computation resources along convergence towards load balance or under substantial load balance conditions (by unacceptable frequent and marginally benefiting calculation of paths), or create a need for non justified computation resources for an expected marginal benefit.
  • the non-desirable effect of small changes in travel time costs on calculation of paths may be reduced to an acceptable level, for example, by allowing discrete changes in travel time costs on links.
  • Such discrete changes may be adapted to enable affordable computation resources to cope with more stable and less frequent path calculations that are still acceptable from cost performance point of view.
  • said discrete travel time costs may preferably refer to time dependent travel time costs that include current and predicted travel time costs, preferably according to controllable DTA traffic predictions.
  • the proportion among travel time costs on non- preferred links should preferably maintain the proportion among links which real time costs reflect, that is, enabling to maitain the ability to apply path calculation and assignments for effective paths to destinations on, and to, non-preferred links according to time dependent travel time costs applied with time dependent shortest path calculations. This method should preferably be applied with said dynamic and static assignment of non-preferred or otherwise preferred links on the network.
  • a complementary method to a method which prevents frequent and non sufficiently stable changes in path assignments, by said discrete changes in travel time costs is applied by assigning a calculated alternative path to a path controlled trip under a path assignment criterion, preferably an adaptable criterion according to traffic conditions, which require that some minimum potential reduction in travel time of a trip (improvement of a path assigned to a trip) may be anticipated to be obtained by the alternative path in order to justify a modification to an assigned path associated with a path controlled trip.
  • an assigning criterion for making a modification to a path according to calculated alternative path may differ from a criterion to apply discrete levels for travel times, and/or usage of further described coordination control processes, in order to prevent too frequent path calculations.
  • the concentration of traffic on part of the network may be allowed as mentioned before to be reduced or eliminated by allowing more links to be preferred links on the network.
  • a reduction in a constraint level may be performed according to identification of reduction in the overall relatively loaded links and possibly also under conditions of sufficient reduction in traffic loads in order to prevent rapid changes that may cause loss of control.
  • the control may divert traffic to be distributed on the network at a higher level of flow, that is, to make the traffic concentration on the network for less dense traffic load balancing.
  • the transition from one level of traffic concentration on a network to another level may depend on acceptable level to control traffic load balancing, and should preferably consider that transition from one level of traffic concentration to another level may not take benefit of tight load balance of a previous level, and therefore, less than tight load balance may preferably applied if a transition to less concentrated traffic on the network is considered.
  • the objective to increase the number of preferred links is to improve the traffic flow, if it becomes affordable by the computation resources, while the objective to decrease the number of preferred links is to guarantee acceptable control under high changes in traffic dynamics.
  • transition from one concentration level to another should be sensitive to include anticipated time related positions of vehicles traveling from non-preferred links towards preferred links and vice-versa.
  • traffic simulations are applied for a network which includes the preferred and the non preferred links although from a point of view of path calculations coordination control processes may be applied on preferred links based on predicted trip entries from non preferred links.
  • coordination control processes applying load balancing, under real time conditions are expected to be performed daily on a continuous base (from early hours in the morning until late hours at the evening) with the aim to enable convergence towards affordable load balance for affordable part of the network under given computation resources and affordable non discriminating distribution of path controlled trips on the affordable part of the network under given traffic potential freedom degrees on the network and traffic control constraints.
  • the issues may become worse, with respect to real time constraints for convergence towards substantial load balance, which a need for transition among different levels of said traffic concentration on the network makes the load balancing most demanding.
  • the negative effects of such issues may be reduced by upgrading said methods, according to which sufficient level of match of current patterns with stored patterns of volume to capacity ratio on links may determine desirable concentration of the traffic on the network.
  • the upgrade may include additional stored predictive control data associated with each stored traffic concentration level, which predictive control data refer to stored historical data for a similar demand and traffic distribution, for which sets of routes and possibly also time dependent travel time costs along a controlled horizon which may be used for preliminary coordination control processes in order to shorten traffic development towards a roughly desirable load balance that may further be refined.
  • Refinements may be applied by coordination control cycles/phases or iterations/sub-phases which are further elaborated. Refinements may enable to overcome differences between the desirable load balance which may preferably be obtained according to current, recent and predicted traffic development, and the rough load balance which was obtained according to the respective stored scenarios associated with predictive control data.
  • An upgraded method may be applied either for a transition of traffic to a higher concentration level from a lower concentration level or vice- versa.
  • a traffic concentration level is associated with a plurality of predictive control data according to different traffic demand and traffic distribution scenarios.
  • Such stored predictive control data may be constructed by off line traffic simulation applying coordination control processes under no real time constraints. Such data may determine, inter-alia, recommended paths according to current and predicted zones to zone and/or link to link related position to destination pairs, as well as possibly according to synthetic respective time dependent travel time costs on links which enable accelerating convergence towards load balance on a respective part of a network.
  • said historical synthetic time dependent travel time costs on links may temporarily substitute real travel time costs and/or predicted travel time costs for path calculations associated with the transition towards desirable balanced traffic on the respective part of the network.
  • This may further enable coordination control processes to accelerate convergence towards load balance by non-small affecting control steps (cycle/phase or iteration/sub-phase) ,which otherwise may negatively affect convergence towards load balance on a non linear system, and which control steps may be associated with the respective stored control data.
  • load balancing applied by gradual coordination control processes on a certain part of network links may determine the content of said load balancing priority layer, which is determined and updated by a load balancing priority layer update process , according to the non balanced level in a network subject to available computation power to apply sufficiently frequent coordination control processes for load balancing.
  • both terms may have the same meaning with respect to load balancing, while in general load balancing control processes may have some wider aspect which include synchronization and communication means applied with coordination control processes and which may be relevant to implementation favor according to current and continuously developing technologies for distributed computation and communication.
  • High usage of path controlled trips may in this respect be the first step towards reduction in highly computation consuming on-line calibration of a high dimension, non linear, stochastic and time varying DTA based traffic simulation platforms, whereas the second step is to apply prioritized relatively loaded links with gradual load balancing which is further elaborated.
  • the first step when path control can't be applied to all or almost all trips which have freedom to use non specific route to their destination, computation power and prediction accuracy issues arise with a need to apply real time calibration of a DTA simulator. In this respect the issue is not just the DTA simulation run time for acceptable accuracy of models but also the stochastic nature of the route choice model within the supply model as mentioned before.
  • the preferred remedy is to avoid as much as possible the need to use route choice model or at least to minimize the share of a route choice model effect on the DTA simulation.
  • the increase in the share of path controlled trips in the traffic by for example methods to motivate path controlled usage as described above, provides a remedy for reducing the negative effect of a route choice model on DTA based traffic predictions for load balancing as well as enabling to increase the accuracy of the demand for trips by facilitating implementation of prescheduled path controlled trips as described above.
  • gradual load balancing for a certain part of the network may apply prioritized relatively loaded links to be updated dynamically in a load balancing priority layer.
  • the content of a load balancing priority layer is preferably determined according to current and predicted distribution of traffic volume to capacity ratios on links, and preferably related to time dependent ratios in acceptable forward time intervals along a finite time horizon within a rolling horizon in order to satisfy required gradual load balancing performance.
  • a finite time horizon may be divided into linear time intervals for determination of time dependent relatively loaded links and respectively associated with a load balancing priority layer according to priorities.
  • a finite time horizon may be divided into non linear time intervals, wherein short term time intervals within the time horizon may be discriminated according to short time intervals in comparison to longer term time intervals in the time horizon, which longer term time intervals may be discriminated for the same level of confidence in prediction as the short term intervals.
  • the division of time horizon into time intervals with respect to relatively loaded links that is, determination of time dependence resolution, may or may not comply with time dependence resolution applied with time dependent travel time costs for path calculations according to different embodiments.
  • discrimination among time intervals within a predicted finite time horizon is performed by a discrimination process which determines the number of the time intervals within the time horizon, and preferably the non linearity of the discrimination as well.
  • the discrimination process may determine the number and the non linear discrimination of time intervals according to the dynamics of traffic in the prediction time horizon, wherein, lower dynamics may be satisfied by smaller number of time intervals in comparison to higher number which may preferably satisfy higher traffic dynamics.
  • Relatively loaded links determined by the load balancing priority layer update process and updated in the load balancing priority layer for load balancing on a determined part of a network (possibly as a result of concentration of load balanced traffic on a certain part of a network), may according to some embodiments be identified dynamically according to dynamic changes in tracked predictions of traffic volume to capacity ratios on network links, during coordination control processes, preferably according to computation power constraints.
  • Prioritized relatively loaded links in a load balancing priority layer may enable to shorten the convergence rate of coordination control processes for a cost which minimizes predicted aggregated travel times of simulated trips on the network at a lower level than can be obtained if non limited computation resources may be applied.
  • Such compromise may be considered with coordination control processes when it is detected that the convergence is too long under real time constraints, that is, there is no sufficient time to apply sufficient number of coordination cycles/phases and/or coordination iterations/sub-phases to detect minimization of aggregated travel times of simulated trips under coordination control processes applied for a controlled time horizon.
  • Convergence can be shortened by increasing the limitation on relatively loaded links to be included in a load balancing priority layer, wherein the convergence rate should preferably be gradually adapted in order to minimize aggregated travel times by minimum limit on inclusion of relatively loaded links in the load balancing priority layer under given computation resources.
  • minimum aggregated travel time may be obtained by a gradual search for minimum limit on the content of relatively loaded links in a load balancing priority layer.
  • the determination of the content of relatively loaded links in a load balancing priority layer may dynamically be changed not just in terms of the number of such links but also in terms of the degree of the predicted traffic volume to capacity ratios on network links.
  • the content of relatively loaded links in the load balancing priority layer is dynamic with respect to the lower limiting bound criteria to include relatively loaded links.
  • evaluation of a need to stop lowering the current lower bound limiting criteria may include, further to the said detection of minimum aggregated travel times of simulated trips, a process to identify reduction in the difference between expected load on links which were determined as relatively loaded links for the content of load balancing priority layer and links that were not included in the layer due its lower bound criteria but starting to show similar link loads due to convergence of the load balancing.
  • Load balancing applying coordination control processes by load balancing control processes which are aimed at distributing path controlled trips on a network, may be categorized as model predictive control, or more concretely model predictive path control, aimed to converge towards substantial load balance on the network.
  • the potential efficiency of such approach depends on the level of usage of path controlled trips, that is, the higher the usage of path controlled trips the higher is the potential to improve the traffic.
  • Coordination control processes preferably apply control cycles and iterations with the planning of paths for coordinating path controlled trips. Iterations may be applied as intra cycle iterations, that is, sub phases of a control cycle which are performed as iterations aimed at coordinating path controlled trips. Control cycles are applied to maintain non potentially interfering attempts to improve travel times for paths associated with path controlled trips while iterative processes to coordinate path control trips are applied, wherein potentially interfering attempts are preferably allowed in the transition from one cycle to another.
  • A-priori discrimination although it has lower implementation priority as further described, is not an approach which is aimed at applying discrimination in the assignment of paths at the stage of convergence but rather allows temporal priority to potential alternative paths which may contribute to higher reduction in travel times on the network which in turn contribute to other traffic to gain benefit indirectly, that is, to gain reduction in travel times before allowing lower priority path controlled trips to take benefit of freedom degrees developing on the network which in turn contribute also indirectly to reduction in travel times of other trips.
  • the coordination control processes which are aimed at planning predictive coordinated sets of paths for said coordinating path controlled trips, preferably maintain a-priori acceptable level of non- discriminating (fair) paths for path controlled trips preferably under a limit that an alternative path to an assigned path will not be expected to be a-priori a less preferred path, and under further limits as further described.
  • Coordination control processes are applying in this respect load balancing which is beyond a response of individual attempts to a feedback about the potential effect of the attempts to improve travel times of path controlled trips.
  • coordination is preferably applied for high usage of path controlled trips in the traffic on the network.
  • the feedback which determines time dependent traffic volumes to capacity ratios on network links, and respectively time dependent travel times, may support gradual coordination of path controlled trips, wherein gradual coordination in this respect may apply said prioritized dynamic determination of highest priority relatively loaded links in a load balancing priority layer.
  • non discriminating coordination control processes preferably include as much as possible a-priori allowance for simultaneous or substantially simultaneous independent attempts to improve travel times as a result of dynamically developing freedom degrees on the network and which said freedom degrees may include relatively developed freedom degrees due to irregularities in the traffic.
  • Such attempts are preferably based, at first, on the potential of coordination control processes to simultaneously take benefit from developing freedom degrees on the network for path controlled trips, and then, applying an iterative processes to mitigate potential overloads due to simultaneous attempts to improve travel times, that is, to mitigate potential relatively loaded links which might divert the traffic from load balance on the network, due to said simultaneous independent attempts to improve travel times, wherein iterative mitigation processes preferably apply simultaneous gradual mitigation attempts to accelerate mitigation.
  • Mitigation of potential relatively loaded links is required when a failure of said attempts to improve travel times for path controlled trips, according to developing freedom degrees on the network along the controlled time horizon, is detected, for example, by traffic prediction that is based on a DTA prediction which is fed by control paths associated with the attempts to improve travel times.
  • the determination of relatively loaded links may be performed under an iteration of a cycle of coordination control processes by a comparison between: a. time dependent traffic volumes to capacity ratios on network links along the predicted time horizon, which is determined by a DTA based traffic prediction fed by paths which include:
  • non-mitigated pending paths that may refer also to non mitigated paths, which are determined as paths associated with path controlled trips providing pending potential alternatives, or pending potential alternatives which are subject to be substituted by new alternatives to current or predicted assigned paths to path controlled trips, according to mitigation, and which non mitigated paths may be generated at the initialization of a cycle of coordination control processes - due to independent simultaneous attempts to improve travel times for current and predicted assigned paths to current and predicted path controlled trips by simultaneous searches for shortest paths according to potential reduction in time dependent travel time costs (developed by freedom degrees or relatively freedom degrees on the network), and as a result of the evaluation of the effect of the simultaneous attempts on travel time costs (along the controlled time horizon associated with current cycle by a synthesis of DTA traffic prediction fed by current and predicted paths associated with said simultaneous attempts and further by other current and predicted paths on the network which may include but not be limited to: current and predicted paths associated with path controlled trips for which said attempts were not performed, current and predicted route choice model based trips, current and predicted non coordinating path controlled trips) such paths may became a
  • b reference time dependent traffic volume to capacity ratios on links of the road network along predicted time horizon, which are determined by DTA based traffic prediction fed by paths which include: a. current and predicted assigned paths associated with path controlled trips which according to some embodiments include paths that are associated with mitigated paths up to the current iteration in current cycle; whereas according to some other embodiments, path controlled trips which were associated with non-mitigated paths and were mitigated during the current cycle, are not included but rather assigned paths and predicted paths assigned to path controlled trips before the mitigation in the current cycle are included;
  • links on which time dependent differences of traffic volume to capacity ratios are found to be above the reference ratios, along the prediction time horizon, may be determined as time dependent relatively loaded links.
  • Such mitigation preferably should include control elements which enable to prohibit meaningful justification to raise a claim that the mitigation is a discrimination process (unfair) under controllable conditions applying predictive load balancing by the coordination control processes.
  • mitigation of potential relatively loaded links may be applied by gradual top-down controlled approach according to which potential relatively loaded links are gradually mitigated by making gradual changes to paths which are detected to fail to improve travel times according to said simultaneous attempts and become a potential cause for relatively loaded links.
  • mitigation of potential traffic loads for potential relatively loaded links may be applied by gradual bottom-up controlled approach according to which the mitigation process gradually fills such links, along a plurality of iterations or even cycles of coordination control processes, by enabling under control to apply gradual simultaneous attempts which otherwise, under evaluation of DTA based predictions of non gradually controlled simultaneous attempts the attempts, fail to improve travel times and are detected to be a cause for relatively loaded links.
  • Such gradual bottom-up controlled mitigation ignores paths associated with non gradually controlled simultaneous attempts to improve travel times due to developing freedom degrees on the network, if such non gradually simultaneous attempts are applied before a gradual bottom-up is initiated. Nevertheless, initiation of a bottom-up process by non controlled attempts may preferably applied in order to make the bottom-up approach non blind approach which has no reference to determine required control steps for the bottom-up approach, that is, if evaluation of the potential effect of non controlled simultaneous attempts is not performed.
  • gradual controlled mitigation may preferably apply simultaneous mitigation attempts, under iteration control steps which may preferably be adaptive to detected convergence rate to minimize aggregated travel times of simulated trips, which may be evaluated by said DTA predictions according to controlled changes in paths, wherein, the criterion to make a change to a path by an iteration control step is that a minimum level of improvement in the travel time may be expected to be obtained, according to the adaptive control step, before a further evaluation to simultaneous mitigation is performed by a DTA prediction according to potential simultaneous allowed changes to paths by the iteration control step.
  • the top-down mitigation applies simultaneous attempts to mitigate relatively loaded links under iteration control steps, which may preferably be adaptive to the rate in the aggregated travel times improvement of simulated trips, wherein the criterion to make a change to a path by an iteration of coordination control processes according to an iteration control step is a minimum travel time improvement.
  • Such top-down mitigation approach refers hereinafter to conservative top-down mitigation which may be less vulnerable to instability in comparison the a non conservative top-down mitigation approach which, according to some embodiments, may fill gradually the potential relatively under-loaded links due to the attempts that cause potential relatively loaded links, and which said non-conservative mitigation approach uses travel time costs on the network according to evaluated DTA based traffic prediction effect according to gradually changing paths to mitigate potential loads of potential relatively loaded links.
  • a non-conservative mitigation approach uses travel time costs on the network according to DTA based traffic predictions fed by gradually changing paths which mitigate potential loads of potential relatively loaded links, while excluding with the search, for alternative paths links, which are not yet mitigated to become non relatively loaded links or in case of gradual coordination to become links which are not part of the load balancing priority layer.
  • Another non-conservative mitigation which may modify said conservative or said non conservative mitigation approaches, may include according to some embodiments allowance to apply chained changes to failed mitigated paths along the iterative mitigation process, that is, non mitigated paths are subject to be replaced by paths which failed to mitigate prior non mitigated paths.
  • the top-down mitigation approach may have advantage over bottom-up approach due to an ability to monitor directly the effect of the mitigation according to DTA traffic predictions which may provide indication on the rate of the convergence toward load balance (especially in a case in which the mitigation enables to recover from a potential deviation from maintained load balance) and further to adapt the control steps according to the mitigation effect on the network, wherein, in any case both top-down and bottom-up approaches identify convergence according to the same criteria which may include identified convergence to minimum aggregated travel times of simulated trips in controlled time horizon.
  • the minimum may be discovered by a detection of a change in the trend towards improvement of aggregated travel times, along a plurality of iterations which may be expanded to a plurality of cycles, and which according to a change in the trend - a return to prior set of paths, which enable higher aggregated travel times, is performed.
  • a top-down approach has an advantage over bottom-up approach as a top down approach provides no direct priority to paths which have higher potential to improve travel times on the network and which the efficiency of bottom-up approach depends on such priority provision. Therefore, a top-down approach is more appealing to users of path controlled trips and to authorities. In this respect a top-down approach balances the demand to take benefits from developing freedom degrees on the network, without compromising on efficiency and fairness as further elaborated, whereas a bottom-up approach may not have such ability.
  • top-down approach has advantage to be the a-priory choice, however, under high demand to take benefit from developing freedom degrees on the network, convergence time of a top-down approach might be too long and a bottom-up approach may be considered to be used in such cases to support the top-down approach by limiting the simultaneous attempts according to prioritized travel time potential savings or according to a random limit on the allowance to take benefit of developed freedom degrees on the network and which random limit restricts the percentage of path controlled trips that are allowed to participate in simultaneous attempts to improve travel time in a cycle.
  • combined top-down and bottom-up approaches provide a realistic compromise between convergence time and ideal acceptance conditions to apply coordinating path controlled trips.
  • the coordination control processes are aimed at improving the traffic flow with an objective to gradually maximize the flow on the controlled part of the network.
  • such coordination control related processes may preferably be applied in a centralized control system, in which each of the path controlled trips is preferably associated with a computerized agent which maintains its interest, wherein a plurality of agents associated with a plurality of calculation of paths for a path-controlled trip may serve path controlled trips with an objective to shorten travel times to destinations, and wherein each agent related process monitors a common feedback about potential effects of simultaneous or substantial simultaneous attempts to improve travel time on the network and to mitigate potential overloads.
  • the said feedback is preferably a traffic prediction feedback applied by simulation of a DTA which is fed inter-alia by control related paths which are associated with simultaneous attempts to improve travel times for path controlled trips or with simultaneous attempts to mitigate potential overloads.
  • simultaneous associated with for example calculation of paths or with attempts to improve travel times or with search for paths may refer either to simultaneous or substantial simultaneous calculation of paths or to attempts to improve travel times or to search for paths.
  • uncertainty associated with the number of the simultaneous processes motivated by individual interests, cause uncertainty in the effect of the traffic on the network, and under lack of efficient control, said uncertainty may cause instability in convergence towards load balance under condition of high usage (e.g., high time usage and high percentage of users) of path controlled trips on the network.
  • high usage e.g., high time usage and high percentage of users
  • instability in assignment of paths may not mandatorily cause instability in traffic development since instability in assignment of paths might eventually be resolved without a need for special coordination in some cases during the traffic development, at split points (junctions) on the network between alternatives according to said dynamically updated feedbacks received by said agents associated with calculation of paths for path controlled trips.
  • said coordination of paths should preferably apply a method which mitigates potential instability (oscillations as well as propagation and/or dispersion of instabilities) and which method may enable to coordinate path controlled trips applying a sort of controlled user-optimal approach (i.e., preferably allowing simultaneous attempts to improve travel times and then mitigating potential overloads) and which method might be crucial to cope with a need to apply load balancing based on fairness for high usage of path controlled trips.
  • a sort of controlled user-optimal approach i.e., preferably allowing simultaneous attempts to improve travel times and then mitigating potential overloads
  • such coordination which might be limited by the potential rate to mitigate potential relatively loaded links on a large network - due to the number and/or the level of the relative loads and/or due to the level of instability - under given computation resources, may apply gradual coordination control processes as mentioned before.
  • potential relatively loaded links are identified according to controllable traffic prediction, and then such links may be updated according to a need in a load balancing priority layer in a common database which is available, for example, to be accessed by said agents, providing prioritized feedback to said agents and accordingly apply gradual distributed computation which apply convergence towards load balance under gradual coordination applied by gradual coordination control processes.
  • instability in the relatively loaded links is handled, as part of gradual coordination control processes, by applying mitigation for prioritized relatively loaded links while forcing non-discriminating distribution of oscillating paths, which are associated with oscillations on prioritized links associated with a load balancing priority layer, on the network, and, further freezing temporarily the distribution for a certain time which may enable to prevent temporal interference to mitigation of prioritized relatively loaded links.
  • frozen paths are gradually released enabling refinements to the forced distribution under more converged conditions towards load balance. The release may by applied gradually during the mitigation by the mitigating control processes.
  • instability in assignment of paths may not mandatorily cause instability in traffic development since instability in assignment of paths might eventually be resolved without a need for special coordination in some cases during the traffic development, at split points on the network among alternatives according to said dynamically updated feedbacks received by said agents associated with calculation of paths for path controlled trips.
  • RLL Relatively Loaded Links
  • RLL from a network point of view that is, including RLL associated with paths other than the path for which an alternative is searched for
  • the network point of view is regional or RLL associated with distinguishable part of the traffic on the network, and wherein such aspect may serve also simultaneous attempts to improve travel times of an assigned path associated with a path controlled trip at a time before it becomes associated with a pending path; and wherein a distinguishable part of the traffic has, on the one hand, high interrelated interaction on the network within the horizon of traffic predictions associated with load balancing control processes and, on the other hand, sufficiently low interaction with other one or more distinguishable parts of the traffic.
  • Examples of low or non interrelated interaction between two parts of traffic on a network is opposite traffic flows such as north to south flow interaction with south to north flow, or even east to west flow interaction with south to north flow.
  • This may further be expanded, for example, to parallel flows in the same direction having low or no interaction within the prediction time horizon, and to separate flows having low or no potential interaction within the prediction time horizon.
  • aspects which include “b)', “c)” and “d)” may gain benefit from a knowledge about the effect on the convergence towards load balance while excluding RLL which are not associated with a single pending path when searching for an alternative path to a pending path.
  • the knowledge may take benefit of recent historical RLL with respect to convergence, and further from, for example, off-line load balancing simulation results of load balancing control processes.
  • load balancing control processes are applied from early morning hours, during which free flow conditions are expected to be on a network, and therefore simultaneous attempts to improve travel times may decline the level of load balance and a failure to improve travel times by simultaneous attempt under such conditions may indicate on one or more links which contribute to declination in the load balance.
  • some preference may be provided to a prior stage in which higher level of load balance may be expected.
  • Links which may be determined as RLL may according to some embodiments be links on which there is an expected significant potential selective increase in the traffic volume to capacity ratios according to said simultaneous attempt and may be determined according to a comparison of the current traffic load to capacity ratios on network link with stored trend of the traffic load to capacity ratios on the network under similar demand. For example, simultaneous attempts which were evaluated by controlled predictions may indicate on declination in the level of the load balance by said comparison if it can be assumed that the objective of the load balancing is to maintain load balance.
  • said significant selective increase in the traffic volume to capacity ratios may be determined according to off line simulations of load balancing control processes for specific hours and days for a specific network, providing typical values to guide on-line traffic load balancing.
  • traffic load to capacity ratios on network links may be retrieved from storage which may be updated by prior on line load balancing control processes or by off line simulation of load balancing processes, and which refers to load balanced traffic having relevance to adjust current traffic, and which said loaded traffic volume to capacity ratios may be used as a reference to first determine the difference between known traffic load to capacity ratios at a stage of load balance and ratios at current traffic conditions, and then to determine, according to a need, RLL to be associated with load balancing priority layer.
  • the stored data may contribute to put in order the priority in handling relatively loaded links and which the load balancing may be expected in such a case to perform at a coarser resolution than the off line simulation.
  • a slow response may be identified according to the trend in the increase or decrease in the number of relatively loaded links and in the level of loads, e.g., according to real time stored history of relatively loaded links.
  • An ideal load balance may be a stage in which no attempt to improve travel time may be obtained while in reality this might not be the case due to continuous dynamic changes in the freedom degrees on the network which are affected at least by the dynamic entries and exits from the controlled network.
  • coordination control processes are predictive control processes applied as part of predictive load balancing control processes of predictive path control.
  • an iteration of coordination control processes is based on predetermined processes associated for planning and assigning paths to path control trips, and which mitigation of relatively loaded links, associated with iterations of coordination control processes, may but not be limited to further be associated with above and further described processes, rules associated with processes and access to data required to be used with processes.
  • processes, rules and access to data, associated with processes of an iteration of, for example, said conservative top-down mitigation provide a skeleton for possible modifications or expansions, according but not limited to relevant embodiments described hereinafter and above, and which such iteration may but not be limited to include according to some embodiments additional, all, or part of the following processes, rules and data, as long as the ultimate objective, under acceptable or non controlled constraints, is to improve load balance of traffic on a road network and which an iteration of conservative top-down mitigation may comprise:
  • non-mitigated pending paths that may refer also to non mitigated paths, which are determined as paths associated with path controlled trips providing pending potential alternatives, or pending potential alternatives which are subject to be substituted by new alternatives to current or predicted assigned paths to path controlled trips, according to mitigation, and which non mitigated paths may be generated at the initialization of a cycle of coordination control processes - due to independent simultaneous attempts to improve travel times for current and predicted assigned paths to current and predicted path controlled trips by simultaneous searches for shortest paths according to potential reduction in time dependent travel time costs (developed by freedom degrees or relatively freedom degrees on the network), and as a result of the evaluation of the effect of the simultaneous attempts on travel time costs (along the controlled time horizon associated with current cycle by a synthesis of DTA traffic prediction fed by current and predicted paths associated with said simultaneous attempts and further by other current and predicted paths on the network which may include but not be limited to: current and predicted paths associated with path controlled trips for which said attempts were not performed, current and predicted route choice model based trips, current and predicted non coordinating path controlled trips) such paths may became a
  • data and decision criteria used and/or produced and/or modified by one or more prior iterations and which are subject to be used and/or modified by the current iteration and which usage according to the following specifies such relevant data and/or criteria, including but not limited to a threshold related acceptance criterion to accept new alternative paths to path controlled trips and which is adapted along iterations to mitigate relatively loaded links.
  • Determination of relatively loaded links by evaluating potential time-dependent effect of mitigated and non mitigated pending paths, updated by the previous iteration, on the volume to capacity ratios of network links along the currently mitigated time horizon, by feeding an on line calibrated DTA based traffic prediction simulator with part of the received paths according to "A" wherein the fed paths are not including assigned paths associated with path controlled trips with which non mitigated paths are associated while including instead the non-mitigated paths associated an a pending alternative to path controlled trips, and according to synthesis of DTA traffic prediction for the currently mitigated time horizon - determining time dependent relatively loaded links by a comparison between :
  • reference time dependent traffic volume to capacity ratios on links which are determined by synthesis of DTA traffic prediction fed by paths which with respect to coordinating path controlled trips include assigned paths (which according to some embodiments include mitigated paths, which were assigned to path controlled trips as alternatives up to the current iteration of the current cycle, whereas according to some other embodiments includes no mitigated paths assigned to path controlled trips in the current cycle) and exclude non mitigated paths associated with assigned paths,
  • links on which time dependent differences of traffic volume to capacity ratios are found to be above the reference ratios, along the prediction time horizon, mainly due to non mitigated pending paths may be determined as time dependent relatively loaded links.
  • the determination of time dependence for relatively loaded links is performed for time intervals which may be longer than the time intervals that discriminate the time horizon for which the current cycle is performed if it is required to maintain more stable mitigation.
  • the determination of prioritized relatively loaded links in a load balancing priority layer is performed according to the potential convergence of the mitigation under real time constraints, that is, slow trend in the reduction of aggregated travel times or increase in the aggregated ravel times may enable to reduce the number of the relatively loaded links in the load balancing priority layer by providing priority to higher level of relatively loaded links.
  • D. Mitigation of traffic loads on relatively loaded links by: searching for new alternative paths to yet non-mitigated pending alternative paths, preferably by substantially simultaneous search processes, wherein, according to some embodiments, time dependent travel times that are associated with a search are determined by synthesis of DTA based traffic prediction fed by said paths according to "A" while non-mitigated paths up to the current iteration are excluded (not fed), and wherein the search with respect to links excludes from the controlled network said relatively loaded links determined by "B” if the link is not a destination link, whereas, if gradual coordination is applied then the search excludes prioritized relatively loaded links determined by "C” if the link is not a destination link.
  • exclusion of relatively loaded links refers to exclusion of the first link associated with a non mitigated path or links which are associated with travel times (associated with the non mitigated path) along part of the prediction time horizon.
  • said searches for paths are preferably performed substantially simultaneously by agents, wherein according to available computation power for real time related performance, an agent is associated with a search for one or more new alternative paths, and wherein a search is performed by calculating a shortest or a substantially shortest path according to said time dependent travel times, and wherein in this respect, and hereinafter and above described embodiments, the term search or the term path calculation for a path refer, if not otherwise specified, to applying a shortest path algorithm known in the art including, for example, A* (A star) algorithm or related variants known in the art, wherein the costs are time dependent travel times on network links in predicted time horizon intervals.
  • a threshold related acceptance criterion to accept new alternative paths as a substitution to assigned path controlled trips, wherein the threshold is adaptively determined in order to enable controllable mitigation by the current iteration in perspective of one or more prior iterations; and wherein, according to prior mitigation rate, preferably during a plurality of iterations, the threshold in previous iteration is modified to enable further higher increase or lower increase or no change in the mitigation, or to return to prior conditions of prior iterations in order to decrease the level of overreaction to mitigation performed by the previous iteration which may negatively affect the mitigation convergence; and wherein the criterion to choose the required trend in the mitigation relates to the functionality of the threshold to limit mitigation of non- deterministic number of non-mitigated paths which may preferably prevent as much as possible non acceptable discrimination in assignment of paths as well as non linear or at least significant non linear effects on the network, in order to enable fairness and controllable convergence along a plurality of iterations.
  • the threshold should preferably be dynamically adapted along a plurality of iterations in order to allow on the one hand predictable convergence and on the other hand rapid convergence.
  • predetermined sets of thresholds may be prepared and stored for different scenarios in order to support coarse reference to real time refined adaptation.
  • real time adaptation of the threshold is supported by, for example, said stored predictive control data which may be expanded to include recommended sets of thresholds according to acceptable match between current patterns of traffic and stored patterns of traffic associated with set or sets of thresholds, enabling to retrieve according to said match desirable coarse set or sets of thresholds which may be refined in real time.
  • a dynamically determined threshold is preferably related to distinguishable part of the traffic on the network, and wherein a distinguishable part of the traffic has, on the one hand, high interrelated interaction on the network within the horizon of traffic predictions associated with coordination control processes and, on the other hand, sufficiently low interaction with other one or more distinguishable parts of the traffic.
  • Examples of low or non interrelated interaction between two parts of traffic on a network is opposite traffic flows such as north to south flow interaction with south to north flow, or even east to west flow interaction with south to north flow. This may further be expanded to parallel flows in the same direction having low or no interaction within the prediction time horizon, and to any other separate flows having low or no potential interaction within the prediction time horizon.
  • a threshold puts a limit on the maximum accepted reduction in potential travel time improvement in comparison to the potential travel time improvement that was assumed to be gained by the search for a path which became a non mitigated pending path (at the time before it was found to fail to provide an alternative to an assigned path due to said substantially simultaneous search processes); wherein the assumed travel time difference according to the threshold is preferably a marginal value (as mentioned in "D.2) in order to enable acceptable mitigation during a plurality
  • the efficiency objective is obtained by providing relatively lower priority to changes to non mitigated paths (failed alternative paths) which according to the search in "E.1" were assumed to have high travel time potential savings, while due to simultaneous attempt to improve travel times the alternative paths failed to improve travel times and are left to be non mitigated pending paths which are subject to potential mitigation along cycle iterations, either directly as a result of accepting new alternative paths or indirectly as a result of accepting new alternatives to other related non mitigated pending paths with respect to common non mitigated relatively loaded links.
  • the complementary objective which is fairness, enabling further to obtain controllable convergence objective along a plurality of iterations of mitigations (due to linear or less non linear effects on synthesis of DTA traffic predictions), are obtained by enabling marginal differences in travel times to be applied with a new alternative path according to the threshold, that is, acceptance of a new alternative, under an iteration, is associated preferably with marginal changes with respect to travel time improvements which were assumed to be gained with the search for paths that became non mitigated paths (the potential travel time improvements of the non mitigated alternative paths were found to be fictitious improvements and therefore such paths became non mitigated pending paths).
  • the difference in travel time may be based on absolute values and according to some other embodiments the difference in travel time may be based on a relative values
  • Assignment of mitigated paths that is, accepted new alternative paths or pending paths, to path controlled trips according to assignment acceptance criteria which may have to take into account that making a modification to an assigned path should preferably avoid, inter-alia, too short reaction time to a modification by human driver or by an autonomously driven vehicle, and/or too frequent changes to assigned paths which from human perception point of view negatively affect the confidence in path control trips, and which too frequent changes to assigned paths further produce non productive usage of communication resources.
  • Assignment acceptance criteria may, for example, include:
  • a condition that the path preferably complies with acceptable frequency of changes to an assigned path to a path controlled trip, to prevent non-productive communication loads and negative effect on human perception which may be interpreted as non stable control, and/or
  • Expansions or modifications to the described iteration may further include but not be limited to:
  • on-line calibration of a DTA simulator which is used with traffic predictions, is applied at least once in a cycle to serve iterations in the cycle.
  • Cycle times may have same or a different time duration along coordination control processes which depends on the convergence time of the mitigation.
  • the relatively loaded links are also determined according to said distinguishable parts of traffic.
  • load balancing priority layer may, for example, refer hereinafter and above to load balancing priority layer in context of distinguishable part of traffic on the network if such approach is applied.
  • a threshold may refer to an opposite functionality than in case of top-down mitigation approach, wherein, according to a bottom up approach, instead of enabling controlled mitigation of potential overloads of traffic associated with relatively loaded links, due to unlimited initial simultaneous attempts to improve travel times, the objective with a bottom-up mitigation approach is to mitigate non exploited usage of freedom degrees on the network to improve travel times. Nevertheless, a bottom-up mitigation approach is not free from a need to mitigate potential overloads of traffic which the bottom-up mitigation may cause, due to its allowance to apply simultaneous attempts to improve travel times.
  • the bottom-up mitigation approach is still exposed to generating potential overloads and therefore should preferably include logic associated with an adaptive threshold to mitigate potential traffic overloads, for example, by top-down mitigation, or by return to prior conditions in order to apply more moderate reaction to the bottom-up approach by a more conservative threshold.
  • TDM Top-Down Mitigation
  • a bottom-up mitigation threshold wherein the objective of a bottom-up mitigation threshold is to limit potential simultaneous attempts to improve travel time of paths assigned to path control trips, due to developed freedom degrees on the network to improve travel time, whereas the objective of TDM threshold is to limit the potential simultaneous attempts to find alternative to disappointing simultaneous attempts to improve travel times.
  • a TDM threshold which is determined dynamically along a plurality of iterations to gradually mitigate potential overloads, limits potential attempts to contribute to mitigation of overloads by providing priority to find alternative paths to paths according to which slight changes to pending paths are made (disappointing paths due to a simultaneous attempt that was made to improve travel times).
  • a search for a path to be assigned to a new entry, or a new predicted entry, of path controlled trip into the network may be performed by shortest path search algorithm according to time dependent travel time costs while relatively loaded links (or prioritized relatively loaded links associated with the content of a load balancing priority layer in case that gradual coordination is applied) are excluded from the search with an exception that if the destination link is a relatively loaded link then the link is not excluded.
  • the time dependent travel time costs associated with such a search is preferably determined according to synthesis of DTA traffic predictions (before referring to the comparison) according to the updated paths by the previous iteration.
  • Such an iteration, and iterations associated with other top-down mitigation or with bottom-up mitigation approaches, may refer with further and above described embodiments to coordination control iteration or to load balancing coordination iteration or to load balancing coordination sub phase or to coordination control sub phase, wherein the term phase refers in this respect to a cycle and the term sub- phase refers to an iteration.
  • a plurality of load balancing coordination iterations or load balancing coordination sub-phases or coordination control iterations or coordination control sub phases are associated with a load balancing coordination cycle or a load balancing coordination phase or coordination control cycle or coordination control phase.
  • load balancing coordination and coordination control is associated with the difference between load balancing control processes and coordination control processes determined above and which synchronization aspects are associated with the load balancing related terms in comparison to coordination control related terms and while referring to one of such terms their respective terms are referred to indirectly.
  • Expansions with respect to cycles/phases for coordination control processes and/or to a path control system and/or to any method associated with a path control system and/or to a vehicular apparatus and/or methods associated with vehicular apparatus may comprise:
  • a said expansion may comprise determination of instability in assigned paths along a plurality of cycles, according to respective recent historical records of relatively loaded links, and accordingly applying non-discriminating distribution of respective non mitigated paths which are a cause for the instability, for example, a simple oscillation between two or more alternatives may be distributed to present substantially equal travel times between the alternatives, and which such paths may further be frozen for a certain number of said cycles in order to prohibit interference to the convergence of coordination control processes.
  • the number of cycles during which the paths are frozen and during which they are released, preferably gradually, may be determined according to different predetermined similar enough scenarios which were performed by off line simulation which indicate on potential convergence efficiency under potential reduction of instability which under real time constraints may cause at the best case inefficiency in the mitigation of relatively loaded links (too slow convergence), and at a worse case to prevent convergence.
  • a said expansion may further comprise declination of an issue of a need to cope with search for paths which their destination time horizons may be beyond the time horizon applied with DTA traffic prediction and which, according to some embodiments, a remedy to lighten the issue is to apply more frequently coordination control iterations and extend the time horizon to the maximum efficient time horizon under computation power constraints for most benefiting results according to DTA accuracy.
  • another remedy may apply with a search beyond the time horizon, travel time costs on network links which can be statistical predictions and possibly rely on stored historical time patterns that may have sufficient match with current traffic related patterns.
  • a said expansion may further comprise a search for a path which may include personal preferences that put constraints on a shortest path search, wherein constraints may relate to, for example, behavior and preferences of drivers which may further include according to some embodiments a tradeoff between reaction to personal constraints and coordination of paths for most efficient traffic flow.
  • traffic efficiency might but not necessarily be reduced while personal considerations are taken into account.
  • hesitancy level of a driver may be taken into account as a personal constraint by choosing a path for a trip which for example minimizes, or possibly excludes, roads and intersections in a calculation of a path to which hesitancy behavior may either affect negatively the travel time on the network or make the driving non sufficiently safe.
  • Safe driving related constraints which might be counterproductive to optimized traffic flow may at least contribute to a more safe driving if drivers may be enabled with their driving navigation aids to setup and/or detect personal safety related constraints to be used with path controlled trips requests (in conjunction with position and destination pairs) as well as with other possibly allowed constraints.
  • a said expansion may further comprise safety related constraints, which may be detected by an in vehicle process that tracks behavior of drivers, for example a black box which serves insurers may determine hesitance or aggressive level of a driver, and/or any other driving behavior indication, which may enable a path control system to assign selectively a path to a driver to maximize traffic flow on the network. For example, according to indication of hesitance level of driving, minimization, or exclusion, with an assigned path of non traffic light controlled intersections, and/or possibly roundabouts, and/or roads in which hesitance may negatively affect the traffic flow, etc., is applied.
  • a said expansion may further comprise automatic detection of hesitance or aggressive level in driving, which may be performed by a black box which may serve insurers to determine entitled discount for an insurance policy.
  • a said expansion may further comprise automatic detection of hesitance or aggressive level in driving in relation to potential interference to merge into non traffic lights controlled traffic, which may be performed by a modified method and apparatus aimed at facilitating merger of an autonomous vehicle in traffic.
  • a learning process during autonomous driving may determine reference for deviation from acceptable behavior of merger into traffic per situation, for example, a roundabout under known traffic load and mix of behavior of drivers. If the autonomous vehicle is in non automatic driving mode (used by a driver) it may identify deviation levels from said acceptable behavior, to be informed to the path control system in order to put respective constraints on path assignment to the vehicle by a path control system, under non automatic driving mode and under the exceptional detected behavior.
  • a said expansion may further comprise constraints on path assignments which may but not be limited to further include : estimated time to enter the network, avoiding non privileged road toll, preference to highways etc.
  • a said expansion may further comprise, with respective described approaches, a tradeoff which preferably takes into account current as well as predicted traffic with path control which might further consider a compromise between personal constraints and which might but not necessarily reduce travel time savings on the network and optimal flow on the network. If personal constraints may relate to safety of driving, a respective path assignment may have positive contribution to economical aspect related to the network flow, and might not stay in conflict with negative effect on travel time reduction.
  • the possibility of non being in said conflict could be either a result of the possibility to improve the travel time savings on the network by adapting trips assignments by the path control system to behavior of drivers in a way that minimizes interference to the flow, and hence improves the flow, or a result of a possibility to compensate by considering the safety related economical value of the effect of safety related personal preferences which puts limits on the ability to obtain optimal traffic flow generated due to reaction to safety constraints.
  • a said expansion may further comprise a multiple destinations trip, such as for example a cooperative trip in which case a vehicle picks-up one or more passengers having different destinations, for example according to a prescheduled trip, and which the trip affects a time horizon of coordination control processes, and in this respect such a trip may be handled either as multiple discrete trips or as a trip having sub destinations.
  • a multiple destinations trip such as for example a cooperative trip in which case a vehicle picks-up one or more passengers having different destinations, for example according to a prescheduled trip, and which the trip affects a time horizon of coordination control processes, and in this respect such a trip may be handled either as multiple discrete trips or as a trip having sub destinations.
  • a said expansion may further comprise, in case of multiple discrete trips, conversion of each destination into an origin towards a subsequent destination at a time it arrives to the farthest destination, ignoring further destinations which affect the demand of trips under coordination control processes.
  • a service which supports constraints on trips with prescheduled pickup destinations may enable, by informing about such constraints as part of a request for trip, a more accurate traffic prediction according to multiple destination pending trips.
  • a sub-trip that is, destination to destination sub-trip, may be handled as predictable demand constructing prescheduled chain of sub-trips.
  • times of arrival to destinations may be used by the predicted path control to refine predicted demand from one coordination control cycle to another.
  • a traffic prediction which is a result of a recent coordination control cycle may feed a subsequent cycle with respective predicted demand according to recent traffic prediction, enabling to refine the respective part of time dependent predicted demand and accordingly traffic predictions.
  • Such demand may preferably include delays required with picking up passengers.
  • Such refinement to predicted demand may further be expanded to include any prescheduled trips either multi-destination trips or single destination trips to refine the time dependent predicted demand for time dependent traffic prediction.
  • a said expansion may further comprise an application of a driving navigation service which supports planning of pre-scheduled destinations trip and which service may further enable dynamic changes in the destinations of the trip, before and during a trip, which should preferably update a path control system by trip related destinations in order to enable multi destination path control.
  • the path control system may enable updates to the said service about changes in estimated time of arrival to destinations through, for example, server to server communication which updates by a path control system the service application estimated times of arrivals to destinations. This may enable the service application to update accordingly the driver, and preferably also participants in a prescheduled trip, with estimated time of arrivals to destinations.
  • a said expansion may further comprise search for time dependent
  • K shortest paths which is applied with said search for a new alternative path to mitigate relatively loaded links in an iteration of mitigation , enabling more efficient mitigation.
  • faster mitigation may use time dependent K shortest paths under travel time constraints by choosing randomly one path out of the K pathsa new alternative path, wherein the random choice is made under a limit that the longest possible path complies with the threshold associated with the mitigation.
  • a said expansion may further comprise, under conditions in which traffic evacuation or traffic dilution is required from a certain part of a network, determination of destinations to be assigned to a vehicle before a search for paths is applied.
  • coordination control processes which should maintain fairness by assigning non-discriminating paths to vehicles, are expanded to support evacuation or dilution towards common destinations which are preferably located farther than effective destinations on the network in order to enable to apply efficient, non discriminating and flexible evacuation or dilution of vehicles towards a plurality of effective destinations (potential multi effective destinations per said common farther destination) according the developing dynamics in the evacuated or the diluted part of the network.
  • a said expansion may further comprise expanded coordination control processes which assign fictitious destinations to vehicles on a fictitiously expanded road map.
  • Fictitious expansion to a map (beyond the part of a real network which should be evacuated) is applied in a case when it may facilitate efficiency and fairness in the assignment of paths during the evacuation or the dilution.
  • fictitious links are planned and assigned on a fictitious expanded part of the road map enabling expanded coordination control processes to guide vehicles towards fictitious destinations through effective potential exits associated with the real part of a network to be evacuated or diluted.
  • a said expansion may further comprise fictitious destinations which may preferably be dynamically distributed around the evacuated or diluted angles enabling to assign dynamic fictitious destinations to vehicles according to dynamic development of the flow on the evacuated or diluted part of the network.
  • a said expansion may further comprise a dynamic assignment of a fictitious destination for a vehicle may be applied by an agent associated with calculation of paths for the vehicle according to increase or decrease in the traffic flow towards a fictitious destination of a vehicle.
  • two or more of the above described cycles of coordination control processes are applies in parallel, wherein each cycle is applied with different fictitious destination.
  • the plurality of results may be evaluated by controlled traffic predictions, by synthesis of different DTA simulations fed by different result of paths according to different fictitious destinations.
  • a decision process may determine the preferred fictitious destination to be assigned for a vehicle with further evacuation or dilution of traffic. The smaller the difference between adjacent fictitious destination, applied by said cycles, the higher is the efficiency to control dynamically assignments of fictitious destinations.
  • a said expansion may further comprise different fictitious destinations which are predetermined as adjacent destinations according to which changes to fictitious destinations are applied.
  • said expansion may further comprise a first choice to assign a fictitious destination which is the fictitious shortest straight line towards a fictitious destination while preferably fictitious destination are more densely determined with respect to more dense exits from the evacuated or diluted part of the network.
  • said expansion may further comprise acceptable exits on a roads map from the evacuated or diluted part of the network which may expand the part of the map of the evacuated or diluted part of the network by straight links towards fictitious destinations, which fictitious links are assigned with fictitious capacities that may not change priorities of said exits.
  • adaptation of capacities and lengths of fictitious links towards fictitious destinations may preferably be assigned dynamically according to developed flows on the evacuated or diluted part of the network.
  • fairness in assignments of paths may be maintained by the tendency of dynamic convergence associated inherently with coordination control cycles and iterations of coordination control processes.
  • tendency towards fair assignments of routes refers to nondiscriminating convergence in terms of travel time for same trip conditions at the time of assignment of paths.
  • dynamic assignment of paths to vehicles, having substantially the same position to destination pairs will be maintained according to current coordination control cycle or iteration using traffic predictions respectively with finite time horizon of a rolling time horizon.
  • a said expansion may further comprise trips that are, or might have been considered, to be assigned with paths, according to coordination control processes, and are not yet within a part of a network that should be evacuated or diluted, and which paths are or might have been assigned with paths which pass through the part of a network before evacuation or dilution has required, may be diverted from the evacuated or diluted part of the network according to a method which uses fictitious time dependent travel time on the evacuated or diluted part of the network.
  • mapped and predicted time dependent travel times on the part of the network that should be evacuated or diluted may artificially be adapted to prevent or dilute entries of non authorized vehicles to the evacuated or diluted part of the network.
  • travel times on links that are related to a part of a network under evacuation may be changed artificially to high travel time costs that prevent assignment of paths by coordination control processes to non authorized vehicles, outside the evacuated part of the network, to enter the evacuated part of the network.
  • the travel time costs of links on such part of the network may be adapted artificially to an allowable level of traffic entry to the diluted part of the network.
  • costs should be adapted dynamically according to developed alternatives on the network and according to the dynamic freedom degrees on the network for allowed entries to the diluted part of the network.
  • a said expansion may further comprise a diluted part of the network which may refer to a part of the network to which evacuated vehicles are guided, and which part of the diluted network includes the destinations of the evacuated vehicles.
  • the evacuated and the diluted parts of the network are divided into sectors, possibly overlapped sectors, enabling the evacuated traffic to be distributed within the evacuated and the diluted parts of the network enabling to shorten the evacuation time under said fairness constraint.
  • DTA based simulation of traffic prediction for a finite time horizon may preferably be long enough to enable evaluation of the potential evacuation result, and which weights to time intervals within the time horizon may preferably be used with the confidence level in predictions associated with forward time intervals, (the term simulation used hereinafter and above may refer to computer simulation).
  • a said expansion may further comprise a path control system which may be expanded to support traffic lights control system, wherein predicted traffic, which is a result of a traffic load balancing performed by a path control system according to a given traffic light timing plan is transmitted to a traffic light optimization system and which accordingly the traffic light optimization system optimizes the timing of the traffic lights timing plan.
  • the updated traffic lights timing plan is transmitted back to the path control system to further perform load balancing by the path control system according to the updated traffic lights timing plan.
  • Such an interaction between a path control system and a traffic lights optimization system may be performed periodically.
  • a basis to determine optimization periods can start from performing such an interaction for each traffic prediction by a path control system up to any period which can be based on traffic lights adaptation to the load balancing applied by the path control system according to predicted average traffic development along a day, or along any other period of time.
  • criterion to determine the period of time may be the stability of the interaction, wherein too frequent interactions may cause instability in the coordination control processes and in the traffic lights control, while less frequent interactions may enable convergence to lower deviations from optimal network flow.
  • Empirical trial and error process may enable to adapt the frequency of the interactions according to system resources and different levels of dynamics in the traffic.
  • a said expansion may further comprise processes associated with agents which are preferably performed in parallel at substantially the same time, that is, a path associated with a trip is associated with a respective agent, or at least a plurality of agents utilize available computation power to maximize parallel computation .
  • a path associated with a trip is associated with an agent which may for example refer to an agent associated with a plurality of trips.
  • said expansion may further comprise links on the network for which load balancing is applied and which links are links on the network that exclude minor roads or roads with minor traffic.
  • the aim of using a diluted network in this respect is to reduce computation power related to path calculations on the network for path controlled trips. With such an approach path calculations for load balancing may avoid a need for coordination of paths on links which won't worth to be considered for load balancing as described above.
  • a said expansion may further comprise a system which provides driving navigation service, and which served by a path control system, calculates a path for a trip according to a request from a DNA, and then, if the path refers to a part of the network which is served by the path control system, then the system which provides driving navigation service transmits to the path control system, in case of for example an entry to a path controlled region, the estimated entry time, entry position and destination with respect to the path controlled served region to the path control system.
  • Transmitted destination should preferably be associated with time dependent arrival position to the served region which may refer to time dependent position related information for a delayed entry of a trip to the part of the network which is served by predictive path control.
  • a delayed entry of a trip to a served region by path control may refernot only to a trip which departs from a position which is outside of a region which is served by a path control system and which anticipated to enter a region which is served by path control at an anticipated time but also to a pre- Angled trip which may depart from a position within the served region.
  • a said expansion may further comprise optimization of degrees of freedom on a network for load balancing wherein optimization may optimize traffic dilution generated by road toll charging, and wherein the determination of the level of the charged toll is performed according to analysis of the contribution of the traffic dilution to improved flow on a network which is generated by for example the said path control ststem.
  • toll charge values may for example be determined to provide optimal degrees of freedom on the network enabling to apply most efficient coordination control processes.
  • Toll charge values which affect the efficiency of a load balancing control processes may use flow trend criteria in order to be optimized.
  • an increase in the flow on the network is a result of an increase in the toll charged values, locally or globally, then further respective increase in the value of the toll is evaluated and so forth. If an increase in the charged value reduces the flow, then a reduction in the toll charge values may be applied. With such approach a search for optimal flow may be obtained for load balancing under local or global demand control. In order to prevent negative responses from the public to changes in the toll charged values, there is a possibility to evaluate the potential increase or decrease in the flow according to simulated increase and decrease in the demand and accordingly to identify trends in flow.
  • value of travel time related criteria may be added to the flow trend criteria, wherein, according to different periods of time priority may be provided to different zones or roads or sections of roads to optimize local flow according to toll charge values.
  • priority may be used to determine local toll charge values.
  • model predictive control approach which predictive coordination control processes apply, the partial model based trips should be calibrated according traffic related information (preferably flow related data) by joint/dual state estimation with respect to the DTA demand state vector (hidden variables) and parameters of the models (hereinafter and above the term predictive coordination control processes refer to the term coordination control processes and which both may be used interchangeably).
  • traffic related information preferably flow related data
  • hidden variables parameters of the models
  • predictive coordination control processes refer to the term coordination control processes and which both may be used interchangeably.
  • Typical division is made between the process (causation) model of a state estimation method applied by the zone to zone demand model of a DTA, and a measurement (effected) model of a state estimation method applied by the supply model of a DTA.
  • Stochastic route choice model which is part of a supply model, categorizes the supply model as a stochastic model (high dimension probabilistic multi model) which under recurrent traffic is noisy, while under non-recurrent traffic (irregularities on the network) is noisy and biased (due to lack of a reasonable route choice model for irregular traffic),
  • Dilution of network links in order to reduce the dimension of DTA calibration may become a non linear, noisy and costly issue.
  • demand prediction are based on statistical models while non linear flow entries and exits from/to the diluted part of the network are at best case might be biased and noisy whereas in the worst case biased and very noisy (in case of entries and exits from/to small links).
  • high cost flow related sensors to measure flow related entries and exits make such a solution costly.
  • Bi- directional DSRC infrastructure which may be considered as another alternative to generate demand data, suffers also from non predictive demand data but in comparison to the former approach it may be expanded to gather predictive demand from DNAs.
  • Such infrastructure is very costly and therefore may not be expected to provide high coverage on a network, and as a result, may support at most a diluted network which may not enable to apply robust predictive path control as mentioned in "h".
  • Car plate identification which theoretically may apply a functionality of unidirectional DSRC, is not a predictive solution and suffers, in addition of a need to consider diluted network due to high costs, from big brother syndrome.
  • Such a solution may start with free of charge road-tolling that further may, according to a need, be expanded to discounted tolling which enables to optimize the ratio between traffic demand and freedom degrees on a network, wherein a relatively low cost solution in this respect is GNSS tolling concept which further creates a vehicular platform that under marginal upgrade may enable to apply robust predictive path control based on authentic data which is gathered from expanded vehicular GNSS tolling system and which may include: predictive demand, predictive routes (paths) and accurate traffic data, which is gathered anonymously; and which further said optimization of the traffic on the network may be supported by longer time horizon predictive demand based on implementation of prescheduled trips.
  • GNSS tolling concept which further creates a vehicular platform that under marginal upgrade may enable to apply robust predictive path control based on authentic data which is gathered from expanded vehicular GNSS tolling system and which may include: predictive demand, predictive routes (paths) and accurate traffic data, which is gathered anonymously; and which further said optimization of the traffic on the network may be supported by longer
  • long term predictions of demand may preferably apply progressively increased time intervals for prediction in the prediction horizon which improves the reliability of predictions but limits the resolution of discrete demand predictions, e.g., with usage of time series analysis methods.
  • K means clustering
  • prior knowledge about expected exceptional demand can be used to enable earlier reaction and more reliable demand predictions.
  • demand based on classified vehicles may further be used to predict demand based on the current and historical mix of classes of vehicles with respect to zone to zone demand pairs. That is, enabling fusion of multi time series analysis according to one or more classes for a zone to zone demand pair, while providing weight to each time series analysis result in the fusion process.
  • the dimension of a demand state vector in this respect may be reduced by a few orders of magnitude if according to empirical study there is a substantial time dependent stationary random split distribution of zone to other zones demand of trip pairs associated with zones on the network.
  • Such a phenomenon is known as quasi dynamic demand which was discovered by empirical studies.
  • some or all of the zones in the demand model may be used as elements of the state vector instead of zone to zone demand of trip pairs.
  • the generated traffic by a zone which has inherent probabilistic destination choice model, has to be estimated as the demand in the state vector. That is, traditional demand of zone to zone demand of trip pairs is converted into quasi dynamic demand of zones in state vector which enables to reduce the dimension drastically.
  • quasi dynamic zone This in turn, expands the route choice model by probabilistic split associated with a quasi dynamic demand from the zone to destination zones (hereinafter, quasi dynamic zone). For example, if there are 300 zones in a medium size city, then the number of potential active zone to zone demand of trip pairs should have been 300 multiplied by 299 which produces a figure close to a 5 order figure, and if in an extreme case the state vector can be constructed of 300 quasi dynamic zones then it may reduce the dimension of a state vector by 3 orders.
  • the stochastic level of the DTA in such a case increases by the probabilistic splits associated with quasi dynamic zones and therefore the gain from dimension reduction in the state vector has a cost in a need to increase the simulation runs of the prediction phase in the state estimation in order to maintain acceptable (averaged) estimation of the demand.
  • the increase in simulation runs may have high cost in computation power, while still leaving open the issue of lack of inter zone related covariance (similar to lack of inter related covariance among zone to zone demand of trip pairs) in the state vector.
  • This method might contribute to a more acceptable state estimation due to reduced computation power, for example, in comparison to Extended Kalman Filter (EKF).
  • EKF Extended Kalman Filter
  • a transition toward Monte Carlo simulation involvement in conjunction with EKF or UKF, or maybe toward a use of an ensemble Kaman Filter increases the stochastic issue and as a result limits the potential accuracy of the demand estimation with respect to non sufficient computation power.
  • reducing the effect of the stochastic issue on traffic predictions may be performed by adding a Monte Carlo DTA post process to the state estimation, wherein according to an updated state vector, produced for example by an average of a plurality of state estimates while using Monte Carlo DTA runs, the Monte Carlo DTA post process searches for a seed or a plurality of seeds that according to acceptable confidence may best match current field measurements, and then uses the matched seed or the plurality of seeds to synthesize traffic predictions for path control; wherein a plurality of seeds enable to average traffic predictions.
  • reduced number of more relevant runs of a stochastic DTA simulator may be used for predictions.
  • Such an approach may further support a certain level of irregularities in traffic as well, where more suitable seeds are used to overcome deviations from typical traffic under non major irregularities.
  • Major irregularities may require identification of the location and size of irregularity and accordingly apply changes in the route choice and in network capacity models. Identification of irregular traffic location(s) and mapping respective development of queues may be found in prior published patents of the inventor of the present invention, describing queue mapping methods.
  • temporal capacity correction is made to a respective location on the network, by rerunning the DTA supply model according to the estimated time in which the DTA flow has deviated from the field flow according to field measurements.
  • updates that were made to the demand state estimation under traffic irregularity, which wasn't identified at the time of the update should preferably be re-updated by a post state estimation process according to temporal changes made to capacities of network links, and preferably according to respective changes to parameters of the route choice model to short term reaction of drivers to traffic loads on the network.
  • Traffic information about irregularities provided to drivers not under path control may be counterproductive to the calibration of the DTA supply models, which provide another incentive to apply path control which is under the supervision and promotion of the authorities.
  • a stochastic DTA used by the prediction phase of state estimation for a plurality of runs may preferably use a weighted average to determine average prediction for the correction phase to be used, for example, by EKF, and may expanded further, for example, to Ensemble Kaman Filter.
  • a further improvement in a dement state vector estimation can take benefit of a piecewise estimation.
  • piecewise refers to piecewise linear relation constructed for non linear relation between the state vector and corrected output from a measurement model according to field measurements.
  • a state time interval which for example may be long enough to enable sufficient reduction in coefficient variation of a state vector, and which might be too long to avoid time varying non linearity of the DTA supply model, can't be represented by a single observation matrix with a functionality similar to the functionality of an observation matrix used by for example a Kalman Filter (and even by a single observation matrix of derivatives as used for example by EKF).
  • multi time related inverse or pseudo inverse observation matrixes are used as a chain to represent piecewise backward linear relation between the state vector and corrected output from a measurement model according to field measurements.
  • the state estimation time interval is divided into multiple intra time intervals which each of them may be short enough to enable piecewise linearization by construction of a chain of observation matrixes for intra time intervals and which each observation matrix is converted into an inverse or pseudo inverse observation matrix for back propagating corrected output from a measurement to a state vector update.
  • Each inverse or pseudo inverse observation matrix which refers to an intra time interval, and which is not the latest intra time interval in the state estimation time interval, is used to back propagate simulated measurements corrected according to field measurements, to prior intra time interval. Such back propagation is performed within the time related inverse or pseudo inverse observation matrixes used as a chain to represent piecewise backward relation which converts gradually corrected output from a measurement model according to field measurements to a state vector update. With such an approach the units of the measurements should be the same as the units of the state vector.
  • such a process may be performed for a plurality of DTA runs which represent the stochastic nature of the measurements of the supply model in order to correct the demand state vector according to average demand estimation.
  • the variance or variance-covariance matrix of the state vector may be propagated forward for each of the selected runs which represent the stochastic nature of the measurements of the supply model in order to assimilate field measurements (correct DTA simulated measurements). Back propagation of corrected variance or variance- covariance matrix may not be needed if the state vector is Poison distributed and only the propagated variance of the state vector is used with assimilation of field measurements, since in Poison distribution the correction to average values of the state vector determines respective variances.
  • the average of the plurality of DTA runs which represent the stochastic nature of the measurements of the supply model is used with average time related inverse or pseudo inverse observation matrixes applying a chain to represent piecewise backward relation which converts gradually corrected output from a measurement model, according to field measurements, to corrected average values of the state vector.
  • Correction to the output of a measurement model according to field measurements is preferably performed by optimal weighted sum of field and simulated measurements where each measurement is weighted by the inverse of its uncertainty and where such optimal estimate is used for example with MMSE optimal estimation or Weighted Least Squares Estimation based methods.
  • a more accurate but more complex approach may use inverse DTA supply model, instead of inverse or pseudo inverse observation matrixes, which makes piecewise approach to be redundant.
  • the piecewise state estimation of a demand state vector is expanded to overlapped piecewise state estimation of the demand state vector, where a piecewise state estimation of the demand state vector is performed by overlapped state estimation time intervals, whereby subsequent state estimation time intervals overlap in their intra time intervals except of two intervals which are, for example, the last intra time interval of the latest piecewise estimation time interval and the first intra time interval of the prior estimation time interval.
  • joint smoothing and overlapped piecewise state estimation of the demand is performed, where back propagated measurements in intra time intervals of the current state estimation enable to improve prior state vector updates by current back propagated and corrected measurements for respective intra time intervals in overlapped state estimation.
  • Such a smoothing process may improve prior updates of overlapped state estimates by optimal weighted sum of field and simulated measurements where each measurement is weighted by the inverse of its uncertainty and where such optimal estimate preferably uses Weighted Least Squares Estimation approach. This approach may enable to improve prior measurement corrections for prior intra time intervals based on new back propagated measurements correction updates.
  • a second phase or an iterative process of piecewise state estimation may be used to smooth non linear beaks in piecewise linear chain of inverse or pseudo inverse observation matrixes, which is a result of bias corrections to the inverse or pseudo inverse observation matrixes after correction of measurements according to field measurements, where a second phase or an iteration in an iterative process enables progressively to reproduce back propagated state estimation with less non linear breaks (jumps) in chained inverse observation matrixes.
  • jumps non linear breaks
  • the piecewise approach may further enable to increase the state estimation time interval to reduce ambiguity in correction of demand state vector comprised of elements of zone to zone demand of trips constructing high variation in lengths among trips.
  • a too short state estimation time interval may leave ambiguity in the correction phase among trips which are longer than the state estimation time interval. This raises a new issue of too long state estimation time interval that generates higher accumulated error due to the increase in the number of intra time intervals respectively.
  • the alternative of using quasi dynamic zones, as variables of the demand state vector may enable to shorten the state estimation time interval while reducing the issue of ambiguity in correction of long trips due to the probabilistic splits toward destinations associated with quasi dynamic zones.
  • an overlapped combination of short and long state estimation may be applied in order to enable, on one hand, demand predictions under quasi stationary conditions by relatively short state time intervals, and ,on the other hand, to cope with ambiguity of state estimation due to long trips by long state time intervals.
  • the short state estimation time intervals the latest update according to long trips may be used.
  • the criteria to determine time length for short and long intervals may take into account the potential reduction in the weight of potential errors due to slower updates for long trips.
  • Demand estimation in conditions where a share of the vehicles may provide traffic related field measurements to be assimilated by state estimation for the correction of a demand state vector, should preferably rely on traffic flow related data constructed by for example the share of vehicles that are using path controlled trips.
  • Traffic flow related data may enable to reduce inaccuracies in the correction phase of demand state estimation in comparison to measurements such as velocities.
  • a DTA simulator may provide typical velocity measurements according to simulated flow densities on links, while field measurements which are relying on limited or on a too small number of vehicles, may not reflect typical velocities according to flow densities. This issue becomes a more significant issue in urban areas wherein significant part of the traffic is characterized by queues for which velocity related measurements may not be suitable to adjust simulation flows by demand corrections.
  • the first means that enables to produce flow based field measurements is queue mapping which enables to provide link flow related data as field measurements according to expected density of vehicles in mapped length of a queue; and which further mapping of arrival rate to the queue and departure rate from the queue may enable to predict the length development of the queue; and which a queue mapping process is based on position related data gathered from probe vehicles providing to the queue mapping process position related data; and which the queue mapping process may use processes of queue mapping described in prior published patents of the inventor of the present invention with improvements according to some demonstrative embodiments of the present invention.
  • an improvement to queue mapping method may take benefit of DTA simulations used with demand state estimation.
  • prior published patents of the inventor of the present invention there is a possibility to map the length, the arrival rate and the departure rate of queues by a small percentage of vehicles in the traffic which provide position related data for a queue mapping process.
  • estimated length of a queue can be mapped for example by reports of positions from vehicles, wherein a queue mapping process which receives the positions may map queues along one or more time synchronized position related record reports provided by probe vehicles, wherein reports of synchronized positions which may suffer from communication delays should not affect negatively the queue mapping at substantially real time, and wherein:
  • the length of a queue is determined according to farthest position out of position reports during one or more substantially synchronized reporting times, and wherein,
  • the number of the substantially synchronized records is determined according to an estimated percentage of vehicles that statistically may take share in said position related data reporting for a mapped queue, that is, the share of the reports in the queue is not the criteria to determine the number of the substantially synchronized records, but the percentage of vehicles that statistically may have a possibility to take share in the reports during the substantially synchronized reporting times.
  • Position related data may refer to the distance of a reporting vehicle from the head (front end) of a queue which requires that a reporting vehicle will have a road map means to determine distance from the head (front end) of a queue.
  • the percentage of vehicles that statistically may have a possibility to take share in the reports during the substantially synchronized reporting times is performed according to statistical methods.
  • such methods might under path control, which applies predictive control in a non linear network response to dynamic flow, to be non reliable or not sufficiently reliable while using probe vehicles which are guided by path controlled trips.
  • the non linear effect limits the time interval in which statistical methods may be sufficiently reliable, that is, under wide sense (quasi) stationary flow and some prior assumption about the probability distribution function to estimate the percentage of vehicles that statistically may take share in said position related data reporting for a mapped queue which under non linear dynamic effects may be changed at a level which can't be ignored.
  • the said percentage of vehicles that may have statistically a possibility to take share in the reports during the substantially synchronized reporting times is substituted according to some embodiments of the present invention to be estimated according to the DTA simulation during, for example, DTA run(s) that produce traffic predictions after demand estimation. That is, vehicles which are using path controlled trips and are simulated by the DTA, and which such vehicles provide position related data reports for a queue mapping process, are used according to the DTA simulation to estimate the percentage of vehicles that may have a possibility to take share in the reports during the substantially synchronized reporting times for a queue mapping.
  • a new term which refers to vehicles that may expected to have a possibility to take share in the reports substitutes the referred vehicles that may statistically have a possibility to take share in reports of position related data for a mapped queue.
  • vehicles that may expected to have a possibility to take share in reports for queue mapping on a link of the network, may use according to DTA simulated flow, short term history of records of the share of such vehicles in the flow (hereinafter "share of records") in an accepted (relevant) time interval according to the stability of path control effects on the link, and which the length of the history of records is determined accordingly.
  • share of records short term history of records of the share of such vehicles in the flow
  • the above process may refer to historical as well as to predicted share records according to DTA prior demand estimation runs and according to recent DTA prediction, wherein the share of time interval to be used with historical and predicted vehicles may be determined according to the confidence in the weight in the predictions which is a result of the path control stability effect on the link. In case of high stability the share of the predicted and the historical share of records may be equal.
  • the issue that may arise in such case relates to the reliability of the queue length estimate, based on the estimated average share of expected reporting vehicles while the DTA and the demand estimation are deviated from the real traffic and traffic demand.
  • the approach of estimating the share of expected reporting vehicles may according to some embodiments be applied to estimate arrival rate to a queue according to the DTA simulation, wherein the share of records are substituted by records of the sum of all vehicles for respective time intervals.
  • mapped queues may be used as field measurements to correct according to state estimation the demand state vector by evaluating flows according to expected densities in a queue.
  • the second means to overcome the deficiency of a small share of vehicles which may provide position related data for field measurements is to use flow related field measurements such as sensors and cameras; wherein major network junctions may preferably be monitored with an ability to determine the traffic flow spits among links from each of the links in a junction.
  • flow related field measurements such as sensors and cameras; wherein major network junctions may preferably be monitored with an ability to determine the traffic flow spits among links from each of the links in a junction.
  • the pre and the post Monte Carlo processes may filter out non relevant runs of a DTA during demand state estimation.
  • accepted DTA runs may refer to acceptable match between field measured splits and simulated splits; wherein the number of Monte Carlo runs may be determined dynamically, that is, required number of runs for required confidence in the demand estimation may count on acceptable number of runs that may acceptably be used according to a match between simulated spits and measured spits, for example, according to acceptable confidence interval as a result of stochastic DTA runs.
  • acceptable number of DTA runs may be used according to weighted average to estimate the demand state vector by for example EKF, UKF and its variants or by Ensemble Kalman Filter.
  • separated secured access to car identification and to trip details is applies by a toll charging center, enabling to void storage of trip details in a toll charging center and to prevent single source access to in-vehicle data.
  • in-car authentication facility when in-car authentication facility provides real authentication characteristic to a toll charging center, through communication means, it shares respectively a non car identification characteristic, but a respective unique characteristic, with the system which provides path control to the car and with the toll charging center.
  • the non car identification characteristic is first shared by the in-car authentication facility and the system which provides the path controlled trip, and then it is shared with the toll charging center.
  • toll charging center to associate path controlled trip with real authentication of the vehicle according to non car identification characteristic associated, on the one hand, with real and non real authentication characteristic and path controlled trip identity (received by the toll charging center from the in car authentication facility), and on the other hand with the path controlled trip details and respective real and non real authentication characteristics received by the toll charging center from an in car authentication facility.
  • privacy preservation of trip details in addition to cost reduction of fixed infrastructure which should identify and locate vehicles independently of the provision of path controlled trips, may be applied with a system which supports in car toll charging units and related methods for free of charge toll or toll discount to encourage the use of path controlled trips as described with some embodiments.
  • free of charge toll or toll discount which encourages usage of path controlled trips preferably apply methods described by some embodiments, which may further improve updates of a road-book database, and which methods to improve updates includes inter-alia data related to traffic lights and signposts along roads and in intersections and their positions, and which such data is transmitted autonomously by vehicles for further updates which enable in-vehicle localizations on road maps according to in-vehicle sensor measurements.
  • improved updates to a road book refers to updating changes in a road-book database by fusion of data which is generated by sensors of multiple vehicles .
  • Sensors in this respect may include but not be limited to RADAR and/or Camera and/or Laser scanner to measure distance and space angle of an object in the vicinity of the vehicle.
  • Said object may include but not be limited to road-book databases elements, such as traffic lights and signposts, vehicles and/or passengers.
  • a central process applies the fusion according to said updates of new road-book database elements generated by vehicles.
  • methods that can be used for said fusion may include weighted average, such as can be applied by weighted least square based methods.
  • GNSS RTK based positioning of vehicles are used to locate some road book elements which can be used further as a reference for positioning of other elements to be updated in a road-book database.
  • the method of updating a new fixed element in a road-book database by a plurality of vehicles may be expanded to enable cooperative positioning of moving vehicles, wherein errors in measurement are expected to increase due to the motion of the measured target and the measuring source which makes the positioning issue worse in comparison to a case of positioning a fixed object such as a signpost.
  • a method associated with functionality of a combined in-vehicle toll changing and path control supporting unit - includes predetermined procedure to perform privileged tolling transaction with a toll charging center, while non exposing trip details, and to updating a path control system with data enabling robust path control performance, the method comprising:
  • a. Receiving by said in-vehicle unit functionality data associated with time related varying positions of a path which should be developed according to dynamic updates to an in-vehicle driving navigation aid, wherein the received data may either be direct or indirect data and wherein indirect data may be may include dynamically assigned paths according to which the in-vehicle unit functionality determines the time related varying positions of a path which should be developed according to dynamic updates to an in-vehicle driving navigation aid, b. Tracking and storing positions along a trip by said in-vehicle unit functionality,
  • GNSS positioning receiver or sensor based localization associated with autonomous vehicles
  • processor and memory
  • a method associated with functionality of an in-vehicle toll changing unit - includes predetermined procedure to perform privileged tolling transaction with a toll charging center, while non exposing trip details, the method comprising:
  • a. Receiving by said in-vehicle unit functionality data associated with time related varying positions of a path which should be developed according to dynamic updates to an in-vehicle driving navigation aid, wherein the received data may either be direct or indirect data and wherein indirect data may be may include dynamically assigned paths according to which the in-vehicle unit functionality determines the time related varying positions of a path which should be developed according to dynamic updates to an in-vehicle driving navigation aid, b. Tracking and storing positions along a trip by said in-vehicle unit functionality, c. Comparing by said in-vehicle unit functionality said tracked time related positions by the in- vehicle apparatus with time related positions associated with said path that should be developed according to updates to the driving navigation aid,
  • GNSS positioning receiver or sensor based localization associated with autonomous vehicles
  • a method associated with functionality of an in-vehicle toll changing unit - includes predetermined procedure to perform tolling transaction with a toll charging center, while non exposing trip details, the method comprising:
  • GNSS positioning receiver or sensor based localization associated with autonomous vehicles
  • processor and memory
  • a path control system may but not be limited to include a non-transitory machine- readable storage medium to store logic, which may be used, for example, to perform one or more operations and/or at least part of the functionality of one or more elements of described figures, and/or to perform one or more operations and/or functionalities, as described above.
  • logic which may be used, for example, to perform one or more operations and/or at least part of the functionality of one or more elements of described figures, and/or to perform one or more operations and/or functionalities, as described above.
  • non-transitory machine-readable medium is directed to include all computer-readable media, with the sole exception being a transitory propagating signal.
  • a path control system may include one or more types of computer-readable storage media capable of storing data, including volatile memory, non-volatile memory, removable or nonremovable memory, erasable or non-erasable memory, writeable or re-writeable memory, and the like.
  • machine-readable storage medium may include, RAM, DRAM, Double-Data-Rate DRAM (DDR-DRAM), SDRAM, static RAM (SRAM), ROM, programmable ROM (PROM), erasable programmable ROM (EPROM), electrically erasable programmable ROM (EEPROM), Compact Disk ROM (CD-ROM), Compact Disk Recordable (CD-R), Compact Disk Rewriteable (CD-RW), flash memory (e.g., NOR or NAND flash memory), content addressable memory (CAM), polymer memory, phase-change memory, ferroelectric memory, silicon-oxide-nitride-oxide-silicon (SONOS) memory, a disk, a floppy disk, a hard drive, an optical disk, a magnetic disk, a card, a magnetic card, an optical card, a tape, a cassette, and the like.
  • RAM random access memory
  • DDR-DRAM Double-Data-Rate DRAM
  • SDRAM static RAM
  • ROM read-only memory
  • the computer-readable storage media may include any suitable media involved with downloading or transferring a computer program from a remote computer to a requesting computer carried by data signals embodied in a carrier wave or other propagation medium through a communication link, e.g., a modem, radio or network connection.
  • a communication link e.g., a modem, radio or network connection.
  • a path control system may include instructions, data, and/or code, which, if executed by a machine, may cause the machine to perform a method, process and/or operations as described herein.
  • the machine may include, for example, any suitable processing platform, computing platform, computing device, processing device, computing system, processing system, computer, processor, or the like, and may be implemented using any suitable combination of hardware, software, firmware, and the like.
  • a path control system may include, or may be implemented as, software, a software module, an application, a program, a subroutine, instructions, an instruction set, computing code, words, values, symbols, and the like.
  • the instructions may include any suitable type of code, such as source code, compiled code, interpreted code, executable code, static code, dynamic code, and the like.
  • the instructions may be implemented according to a predefined computer language, manner or syntax, for instructing a processor to perform a certain function.
  • the instructions may be implemented using any suitable high-level, low-level, object-oriented, visual, compiled and/or interpreted programming language, such as C, C++, Java, BASIC, Matlab, Pascal, Visual BASIC, Python, assembly language, machine code, and the like.
  • Fig. 2 schematically illustrates a product of manufacture 200, in accordance with some demonstrative embodiments.
  • Product 200 may include one or more tangible computer-readable non- transitory storage media 202, which may include computer-executable instructions, e.g., implemented by logic 204, operable to, when executed by at least one computer processor, enable the at least one computer processor to implement one or more operations at one or more apparatuses and/or systems, to cause to perform one or more operations, and/or to perform, trigger and/or implement one or more operations, communications and/or functionalities described above with reference to any of the figures, and/or one or more operations described herein.
  • non-transitory machine-readable medium is directed to include all computer-readable media, with the sole exception being a transitory propagating signal.
  • product 200 and/or storage media 202 may include one or more types of computer-readable storage media capable of storing data, including volatile memory, non-volatile memory, removable or non-removable memory, erasable or non-erasable memory, writeable or re-writeable memory, and the like.
  • machine-readable storage media 202 may include, RAM, DRAM, Double-Data-Rate DRAM (DDR-DRAM), SDRAM, static RAM (SRAM), ROM, programmable ROM (PROM), erasable programmable ROM (EPROM), electrically erasable programmable ROM (EEPROM), Compact Disk ROM (CD-ROM), Compact Disk Recordable (CD-R), Compact Disk Rewriteable (CD- RW), flash memory (e.g., NOR or NAND flash memory), content addressable memory (CAM), polymer memory, phase-change memory, ferroelectric memory, silicon-oxide-nitride-oxide-silicon (SONOS) memory, a disk, a floppy disk, a hard drive, an optical disk, a magnetic disk, a card, a magnetic card, an optical card, a tape, a cassette, and the like.
  • RAM random access memory
  • DDR-DRAM Double-Data-Rate DRAM
  • SDRAM static RAM
  • ROM read-only memory
  • the computer-readable storage media may include any suitable media involved with downloading or transferring a computer program from a remote computer to a requesting computer carried by data signals embodied in a carrier wave or other propagation medium through a communication link, e.g., a modem, radio or network connection.
  • logic 204 may include instructions, data, and/or code, which, if executed by a machine, may cause the machine to perform a method, process and/or operations as described herein.
  • the machine may include, for example, any suitable processing platform, computing platform, computing device, processing device, computing system, processing system, computer, processor, or the like, and may be implemented using any suitable combination of hardware, software, firmware, and the like.
  • logic 204 may include, or may be implemented as, software, firmware, a software module, an application, a program, a subroutine, instructions, an instruction set, computing code, words, values, symbols, and the like.
  • the instructions may include any suitable type of code, such as source code, compiled code, interpreted code, executable code, static code, dynamic code, and the like.
  • the instructions may be implemented according to a predefined computer language, manner or syntax, for instructing a processor to perform a certain function.
  • the instructions may be implemented using any suitable high-level, low- level, object-oriented, visual, compiled and/or interpreted programming language, such as C, C++, Java, BASIC, Matlab, Pascal, Visual BASIC, assembly language, machine code, and the like.
  • Previously described embodiments are widely covering aspects related to robust and efficient implementation of predictive traffic load balancing and safe driving, highlighting privacy preserving aspects relating to privileged tolling and anonymous operation of navigation driven traffic load balancing.
  • commercial driving navigation systems and services which may facilitate access of a predictive controlled load balancing system to an existing operation of DNAs, may not be interested to maintain privacy preservations at a level in which public authorities should be able to guarantee anonymous path control under said privileged tolling, and further may not find interest in limiting advertisement related messages to DNA users which authorities should have interest to limit due to its potential negative effect on predictive load balancing at a network level.
  • Another aspect which previous embodiments are not covering refer to tolerated reaction to non obedience to path controlled trip which may be a result of an objective or a subjective reason which may preferably be tolerated.
  • a further non covered aspect refers to a need to protect the load balancing operation from hostile attack by anonymous faked requests for path-controlled trips which may harm the traffic load balancing operation.
  • fig.lg and fig.lh integration of a path control system with a commercial Driving Navigation System (DNS) are illustrated in fig. If, fig.lg and fig.lh according to which an integrated system may include :
  • a path control center constructed for example of said traffic mapping layer, said traffic prediction layer, and said paths planning layer, wherein a Driving Navigation System (DNS) is used as an agent of the path control center for providing path control trips to DNAs, and wherein said usage condition layer described in said figures is not necessarily considered to be part of the path control center,
  • DNS Driving Navigation System
  • a privileged tolling system constructed of a toll charging center, applied for example by said usage- condition layer, and complemented by an automatic car plate identification system and by said in- vehicle toll charging unit functionality applying GNSS tolling approach with in- vehicle privacy preservation while performing tolling transactions.
  • Such a system configuration is assumed to be able to guarantee high usage of in-vehicle privacy preserving path controlled trips associated with privileged tolling transactions which according to in- vehicle privacy preserving charging approach hides trip details from a toll charging center enabling to maintain robust anonymous provision of path controlled trips without the weakness associated with centralized privacy preservation which requires to store charging details, associated with for example an identity of a vehicle or a vehicle owner, on a central storage .
  • DNSS commercial DNS Service
  • integration with a commercially operated DNS service raises a conflict between a need to guarantee privacy preserving path control trips by the authorities under provision of path controlled trips, and the interest of a commercially operated DNS service to serve identified users or at least consistent anonymous identity according to which traveling behavior may be tracked.
  • Anonymity by itself might not be sufficient to guarantee full privacy preservation under commercially operated DNSS, that is, there are ways to decipher authentic identities of vehicles through recurrent tracked trips with the support of existing databases as further described.
  • the toleration to such type of advertisement is applied by limiting the allowable advertisement operations to a vehicle during a trip, for example according to demand of authorities, which may empirically be adapted to acceptable efficiency of the predictive traffic load balancing.
  • This may but not be limited to further include other tolerated deviations (i.e., disobedience to path controlled trip) which may relate, for example, to a need of a vehicle to enter into a gas station and other possible occasional reasons and which such deviations should preferably be tolerated.
  • deviations associated with different levels of negative effect on predictive traffic load balancing are charged by tolling means through for example said in-vehicle privacy preserving charging approach applied with a toll charging system and an in vehicle toll charging unit or unit functionality.
  • tolerated tolling is applied with provision of tolling credit, preferably the credit is renewed periodically to each vehicle, for example each month, each day etc., wherein according to such embodiments tolling credit balance notifications are further provided to drivers, for example, after each tolling transaction - according to which a driver may decide how to use further his tolling credit if any credit is left.
  • charge of credit may or may not differentiate between deviations that are the result of reaction to advertisement, wherein deviation due to location based advertisement may be identified according to the time related content of advertisement and tracked reaction to such content. According to some embodiments, an identified deviation as a result of reaction to location based advertisement is treated separately with respect to credit and toll charge.
  • not any deviation i.e., disobedience to path controlled trip
  • toll charging that preferably is tolerated by said tolling credit (tolerated tolling).
  • tolling credit tolling credit
  • a new request for a path controlled trip to a new destination is not performed (substituting a prior destination) while deviation from a requested destination of a path controlled trip is performed in the vicinity of the destination, wherein the range of such vicinity is determined according to predetermined criteria and preferably notified to the user of the vehicle, then as long as the vehicle is within the vicinity it may not be charged by toll or from said credit.
  • a path control center may assign a destination to a path controlled trip for a parking purpose according to a request or automatically (if allowed by the user of the vehicle, preferably with a limit on the distance from the trip destination determined for example by the vehicle user through for example user interface of a DNA or DNA functionality).
  • conditional tolerated toll is a case according to some embodiments in which a vehicle did not initiate a request for a path controlled trip while initiating a trip and which toleration may refer to a limited part of a network on which a vehicle should have used a path controlled trip.
  • Such a cases may be treated according to some embodiments as a conditional tolerated tolling according to which a driver or a user of autonomous vehicle may first be warned about detection of such conditions, by for example a toll charging unit or by a further described expanded types of toll charging unit, which may detect such conditions.
  • a detection may be performed by tracking with the in vehicle unit the travel of the vehicle and determining according to the conditional tolling entitlement for toleration. In this respect, after a certain time and/or a certain distance that a vehicle travels without obeying to a path controlled trip it starts to be charged by toll and/or from personal toleration credit.
  • the issue relates in this respect to a technical ability of a DNS to record paths of trips as part of the provision of assigned paths to path controlled trips, and accordingly to decipher indirectly by a DNSS operator authentic identities of vehicles at some level of confidence according to potential association of anonymous trip records with personal data from external databases.
  • a concrete example in this respect may relate to a possibility to obtain data by a commercial DNSS operator from external database about residence location of a vehicle owner and about his work location, which data may further be associated at some level of certainty with records of anonymous recurrent trips, enabling to decipher accordingly association of an identity with recorded anonymous trips.
  • a least worth objective for such association may be the interest to learn about habits associated with non recurrent trips used by a vehicle - by tracking further non recurrent trips - which the public may not accept under non pure voluntary joining to an operation.
  • a remedy to such an issue is to deliver assignedpaths by a path control system to path controlled trips through a DNS wherein on the DNS, on a DNA and on a path control system random access memory (RAM) is used with processes associated with said delivery and display of paths on for example a DNA.
  • RAM path control system random access memory
  • the storage should preferably be a protected storage that should preferably be erased soon after it is not required for further control on a path controlled trip.
  • assigned paths on a RAM may not be considered to be automatically erased soon after such data are not needed for control, due to the assumption that dynamic allocation of memory of an operating system to other applications on a DNS and on a DNA. erase such data from RAM, then in case that said assumption is not trustable such data should according to some embodiments be erased from the RAM intentionally.
  • Such Protecting Usage of Assigned Paths, associated with path controlled trips - whether it is applied on a DNS and/or a DNA and/or a path control center - is referred hereinafter as PUAP.
  • a partial remedy to such an issue is to upgrade a commercial DNSS by Robust Anonymous Registration (RAR) option, that is, to perform with each request for a path controlled trip (or at least to register anonymously per limited number of trips - with a less robust option) anonymous registration which applies varying anonymous identities to a vehicle, disabling with such approach association of anonymous non-recurrent tracked trips with recurrent trips which their identities might be deciphered as mentioned before and which might be performed if the anonymous identity would not be changed frequently.
  • RAR Robust Anonymous Registration
  • the term registration is used for convenience in order to differentiate RAR related requests from registered user request.
  • the term registration has a different meaning in this respect as there is no actual traditional registration associated with said RAR related requests.
  • RAR might be substituted hereinafter by a term such as Non Registration Required Anonymous Request for Path Controlled Trip (NRRAR-PCT).
  • RAR approach is associated at least with PUAP on DNAs, enabling to apply less robust privacy preservation approach in comparison to an approach which applies RAR and PUAP on the DNS as well, under the supervision of authorities, wherein the strength of applying RAR with PUAP on DNAs is in the ability to provide robust protection on anonymous non recurrent trips.
  • authentication of a vehicle in order to be allowed to be served by path controlled trips is applied by said RAR associated with Authentic Registration Characteristic (ARC) data, wherein ARC is updated dynamically for example by a daily or an hourly update, and wherein the toll charging unit or an expanded toll charging unit may receive an updated ARC through communication with a toll charging center.
  • ARC update Authentic Registration Characteristic
  • the updates are secured updates which may reduce potential hostile anonymous fake RAR associated with ARC to harm a load balancing operation.
  • An ARC, stored in a toll charging unit or in an expanded toll charging unit may according to some embodiments be updated according to a request by the toll charging unit or by an expanded toll charging unit from a server of a said toll charging center, which first confirms the authentic identity of a vehicle by for example car plate number transmitted by the toll charging unit or the expanded toll charging unit to the toll charging center and then the ARC is transmitted back or downloaded from said toll charging center and stored on the toll charging unit or on the expanded toll charging unit.
  • the data used for authentication which may be based for example on car plate registration number, and/or another/other acceptable authentication characteristic(s), stored in or read by toll charging unit or stored in or read by an expanded toll charging unit, is allowed to be exposed to said toll charging center and disallowed to be exposed to said path control center which applied anonymous operation with path controlled trips.
  • the ARC is a non personal identifying characteristic, that is, a characteristic which may be associated with a plurality of toll charging units or with a plurality of expanded toll charging units, at the same time, enabling to confirm that the vehicle is certified to request and be served by path controlled trips.
  • a complementary process to ARC update in toll charging units or expanded toll charging units is to update the DNS and/or the path control center with ARC as well, in order to enable authentication of requests of a vehicle by for example RAR associated with ARC that further enables the vehicle to be served by path controlled trips.
  • Such an update may be performed by transmitting by said toll charging center updated ARC to a server of the path control center and according to some embodiments the path control center transmits further the ARC to a server of a DNS.
  • An updated ARC which is stored in a DNS server, in a path control center and in toll charging units or in an expanded toll charging units, enables to apply RAR associated with ARC by toll charging unit or by an expanded toll charging unit according to which ARC is transmitted to a path control center and/or to a DNS.
  • RAR associated with ARC which is initialized by a toll charging unit or by an expanded toll charging unit, enables a DNS and/or a path control center to compare the received ARC from a toll charging unit or from an expanded toll charging unit with stored ARC received from said toll charging center.
  • a DNS as part of a reception of RAR associated with ARC, compares updated ARC stored in server of the DNS with the received ARC associated with RAR and according to a match the requesting vehicle is allowed to be served anonymously by the DNS (or directly by a path control center) preferably through an expanded toll charging unit which activates in this respect an in vehicle DNA and which activation related functionality is further described with some respective embodiments.
  • An update of ARC in a server of a path control center may further enable applying authentication of data transmitted from a toll charging unit or from an expanded toll charging unit to a path control center, as described for example in fig. lc fig.ld, fig. le, fig. lg, fig. lh, fig.3a, fig.3b, fig.3c, and which data may refer to position update through 222, 218 and 212 and destination update through 212.
  • said ARC associated with transmission of position and/or destination data may according to some embodiments be compared with updated ARC stored in a path control server, as part of the procedure or receiving and authenticating such data received from toll charging a unit or from an expanded toll charging unit.
  • Authentication applied by ARC may be strengthened or be substituted in case that the authentication is used to prevent fake (hostile) requests for path controlled trips which may reduce the reliability of the path control operation.
  • tracked positions through said 222 and/or 218 and/or 212 in fig.lc fig. ld, fig. le, fig.lg, fig.lh, fig.3a, fig.3b, fig.3c may enable to detect whether a vehicle follows the traffic development and not faking obedience to an assigned path that is expected to be associated with a path control trip.
  • anonymous tracked positions are compared with velocities that are developed on a respective link, and if a suspicious deviation from normal velocity or lack of compliance with traffic light controlled traffic is detected, then according to some embodiments the path control center transmits to the respective toll charging unit or to the respective expanded toll charging unit a message according to which the toll charging unit or the expanded toll charging unit has to transmit to an authentication server applied for example with the toll charging center a request for Robust Authentication Characteristic (RAC) which message is aimed at confirming acceptable non identifying authentication of a vehicle further to ARC.
  • RAC Robust Authentication Characteristic
  • said request for RAC confirmation (wherein according to some other embodiments the message includes time related position data which under course resolution may refer for example to link related data on which the vehicle travels/traveled for example at the time of the request) is transmitted from a toll charging unit or from an expanded toll charging unit to a toll charging center.
  • said toll charging center transmits time stamped RAC to the toll charging unit or to the expanded toll charging unit, and, after the reception, the toll charging unit or the expanded toll charging unit transmits to the path control center server the time stamped RAC anonymously, wherein the time stamp may be determined by said toll charging center and associated with the transmitted RAC preferably with updated ARC.
  • said time stamped anonymous RAC is transmitted also by said toll charging center to a path control center server (wherein according to some other embodiments the message refers also to said position related data such as link related data of the vehicle), which such server or another server of the path control center compares the time stamped RAC received from the toll charging unit or from the expanded toll charging unit with said time stamped RAC received from the toll charging center, and if a match is found than the vehicle that was requested to confirm its authentication during a path controlled trip may further be served by the path controlled trip.
  • a path control center server wherein according to some other embodiments the message refers also to said position related data such as link related data of the vehicle
  • the vehicle in case that a match is not found or a time stamped RAC is not received from the toll charging center, then the vehicle is determined as a fake vehicle by the path control center and is further ignored by the path control center (or is fed by faked control data in order not to raise suspicion about detection of a faked request enabling to reduce the potential amount of further faked requests).
  • a vehicle is still suspicious as providing fake positions which indicate on abnormal behavior, despite of a reception of respective RAC by the path control center from a toll charging center and confirmed by comparison of RAC received from a toll charging unit or an expanded toll charging unit, for example according to an indication on velocity which is higher than expected velocity on highly loaded link, then such vehicle is ignored by the path control center or is fed by faked control data in order not to raise suspicion about detection of a faked request.
  • data associated with authentic identity is recorded in a toll charging center as part of the described process enabling to approach an owner of such vehicle for questioning.
  • ACP Authentication Confirming Process
  • an ACP is activated according to predetermined criteria under conditions in which there is a significant number of said suspicious vehicles.
  • a remedy that enables further to apply robust protection from said potential deciphering of identities by a commercially operated DNS, according to recurrent trips may be applied by transmitting encrypted assigned paths for path controlled trip to a vehicle, by the path control center, through a DNSS which further on has no access to such decrypted data in the vehicle.
  • the decryption key for such data is transmitted directly to an expanded toll charging unit (which is further described) from a path control center. Preferably transmission of a decryption key is performed per trip.
  • the DNS may transmit to a vehicle related data with respect to a need to maintain a path controlled trip activity associated with activation of a DNA application through an expanded toll charging unit without intervention of another transmitter such as a path control center transmitter which otherwise should transmit directly dynamic updated to assigned paths for and during a path controlled trip.
  • applying PUAP on a path control center and on DNAs, under prevention of said DNS to access a DNAs may eliminate potential association of recurrent trips with external data through said DNS.
  • a Robust Anonymous Path Control Service level 1 applies: a. said PUAP of paths assigned to path controlled trips on a path controlled system and on DNAs, wherein a DNS may not have access to assigned paths of path controlled trips in the vehicle,
  • RAPCS level 2 applies at least :
  • RAPCS level 3 applies at least :
  • PUAP on a DNS, wherein a DNS may preferably not have access to assigned paths of path controlled trips in the vehicle,
  • a DNA upgraded by RAPCS under certification of authorities is considered to be according to some embodiments a Certified DNA (C-DNA) which may further enable to communicate with an in-vehicle expanded toll charging unit as further described.
  • C-DNA Certified DNA
  • RAPCS 1 or RAPCS2 may lead authorities to consider adoption of an OEM DNS platform instead of integration of a commercially operated DNSS platform with a path control system and in this respect to upgrade an OEM platform by for example RAPCS2.
  • Said OEM platform may include a DNS and respective DNAs of the OEM platform provider.
  • the OEM based DNS which may preferably be owned by the authorities, may implement RAPCS2 under supervision of the authority.
  • DNS with a path control center despite of the additional cost in comparison to an operational DNSS, it may cause pecuniary loss to the DNSS operation, that is, such an operator may lose DNA users due to a more attractive DNSS operation applied by the authorities RAPCS2, providing privacy preserving privileged tolling as well as higher travel time savings.
  • limitations on provision of advertisement may include controlled tolerated advertisement at a certain limited level applied by said tolerated tolling and said charged tolerance related credit associated with disobedience to a path controlled trip.
  • a more conservative approach from a point of view of the authorities is to control the functionality of advertisement based DNSS by enabling to provide advertisement just through an OEM based DNS integrated with a path control center which applies for example RAPCS2, wherein in this respect provision of advertisement to path controlled trip users is enabled according to some embodiments under control for relevant parts of trips - that is, said toleration to location based advertisement may be applied under control of authorities.
  • the OEM based DNS may optionally be based partially on a relevant part of an advertisement based DNS, provided as an OEM platform to the authorities.
  • an operational DNSS platform may acceptably guarantee, under supervision of authorities, full control on applied RAPCS level 2, then OEM DNS may become redundant and such an operational DNSS may be considered to be a Certified DNSS (C-DNSS), that is, according to some embodiments such DNSS is certified to receive assigned paths for path control trips from a path control center and be the channel to provide assigned paths to path controlled trips - as an agent of a path control center maintained by the authorities - through DNSS related C-DNAs or through other C-DNAs associated with in vehicle expanded toll charging unit which is further described.
  • C-DNSS Certified DNSS
  • a path control center may either be upgraded by a C-DNSS, or a C-DNSS may be upgraded by path control center abilities.
  • the integration and hosting place of an intergraded system may affect the potential efficiency to apply full control by authorities on a C-DNSS with respect to RAPCS.
  • a Partially Certified DNSS may according to some embodiments be authorized to access its own DNA users but not be authorized to access other C-DNAs through an expanded toll charging unit which a C-DNSS may access as further described.
  • PC-DNSS and C-DNSS apply RAPCS indirectly with their own C-DNA users
  • IC-DNSS Independent Certified DNSS
  • IPC-DNSS Independent Partially Certified DNSS
  • IC-DNA Independent C-DNA
  • fig. lg and fig. lh may illustrate, wherein the DNSS is either an IC-DNSS or an IPC-DNSS.
  • Access to a C-DNA indirectly, through said in-vehicle expanded toll charging unit, either by a path control center or by a C-DNSS, may enable to support robust certified provision of assigned paths to path controlled trips through a global potential industry which may produce C-DNAs, wherein providers of such C-DNAs may include but not be limited to be supplied by providers of DNA applications to smart-phones, to automakers which install pre-market DNAs in vehicles, to autonomous vehicle control system producers which include in such systems DNAs , and to aftermarket DNA providers.
  • a C-DNA is preferably activated through a user interface associated, for example, with the C-DNA, and through said in-vehicle expanded toll charging unit through which path controlled trips are provided to the C-DNA.
  • Access to a C-DNA or to a C-DNA application, under RAPCS and as part of RAPCS, should according to some embodiments be disabled through means other than the in-vehicle expanded toll charging unit or said user interface, with an exception of a C-DNS and a PC-DNS and a IC-DNS and a IPC-DNS applying RAPCS2 which are allowed to have access.
  • said in-vehicle expanded toll charging unit through which a C- DNA receives assigned paths for path controlled trips may refer to Hybrid Control and Tolling Unit (HCTU) through which the path control center or a C-DNSS may access a C-DNA.
  • HCTU Hybrid Control and Tolling Unit
  • a C-DNSS and a PC-DNSS are not allowed under RAPCS to access directly C-DNAs but rather through HCTU, at least with respect to assigning paths to path controlled trips.
  • a smart-phone installed with a C-DNA software application may according to some embodiments be accessed by a C-DNSS or by a PC-DNSS through HCTU which, further to path controlled trips and requests for path controlled trips, may deliver background data to the C-DNA.
  • Background data may include but not be limited to, for example, data to display maps, messages related data, and other data which are associated with ongoing activation of a C-DNA according to a predetermined communication protocol through a certified communication medium.
  • the path control center assigns paths for path controlled trips by transmitting respective data to HCTUs directly, or through a C-DNSS or through a PC-DNSS, and in turn each HCTU transmits the assigned path to its related in-vehicle C-DNA.
  • the C-DNA may but not be limited to be a software application installed on a smart-phone, or to be a connected in-car C-DNA, or to be a connected C-DNA associated with autonomous vehicle control system, wherein the communication between an HCTU and a C-DNA may be applied for example through in-vehicle device to device communication such as, but not be limited to, Bluetooth communication, or with less efficient approach through non in-vehicle communication such as through a mobile communication network, wherein according to some embodiments said communication is secured communication.
  • in-vehicle communication may expand said communication content between a toll charging unit and a DNA to support communication between HCTU (which expands toll charging unit functionalities) and C-DNA (a certified DNA which communicates with an HCTU).
  • the communication is a bidirectional data communication enabling to maintain inter-alia assignments of paths to path control trips and requests for assigned paths to path-controlled trips.
  • the communication between an HCTU and the path control center and/or between the HCTU and a C-DNSS or a PC-DNSS may be applied for example through a mobile communication network under anonymous data communication by a toll charging unit wherein anonymous communication is further elaborated with respect to a need to apply anonymous and non anonymous communication by for example an HCTU functionality.
  • a request from a vehicle for being guided by a path control trip is associated with distinguishable anonymous characteristic of a vehicle, wherein according to some embodiments the anonymous characteristic is determined by a communication procedure between an HCTU and the path control center or between an HCTU and a C-DNSS or between an HCTU and a PC- DNSS, and wherein according to some embodiments the anonymous identifying characteristic of a vehicle is preferably determined according to RAR, and wherein according to some embodiments potential voluntarily accepted non anonymous IC-DNAs or IPC -DNA with non-anonymous registration to a IC- DNSS or IPC-DNSS may also be associated with distinguishable anonymous characteristic in order to maintain anonymous path requests for a path controlled trip through 233a and receive respectively assigned path from the path control center through 234a for a C-DNA associated with 233a.
  • dynamic determination of distinguishable anonymous characteristic associated with a vehicle according to RAR may be determined by IP address allocated for a client device (in client server architecture) by a mobile communication network to the HCTU for said anonymous communication during a trip.
  • the IP address is preferably assigned either directly or through a DNSS at the beginning of each trip as part of RAR, wherein assignment of paths to path controlled trips are initiated according to a request entered to a C-DNA and tagged with the IP address that the toll charging unit or the HCTU allocates for anonymous identity to be used further with the requests or assignments of paths for path controlled trips from the path control center.
  • a new assigned IP address associated with reconnection may be concatenated with the prior used and stored IP address with respect to anonymous identity associated with a path controlled trip, wherein concatenated characterization enables to further use IP related anonymous identity to be maintained with further maintenance of communication related to the same path control trip by identifying the vehicle according to its currently assigned IP address and prior assigned IP address or IP addresses wherein predetermined prior assigned IP address or addresses are associated with the content of further messages of the same path controlled trip for example according to a respective header for reading the content of a message.
  • a more robust assignment of anonymous identifying characteristic (possibly non IP address related) to a path controlled trip is applied with a request performed by an HCTU from a server that according to some embodiments is associated with a path control center (e.g., a paths planning layer of a path control center).
  • a path control center e.g., a paths planning layer of a path control center
  • cancelation of an assigned anonymous characteristic to a path controlled trip in a said server is performed when the trip arrives to its destination, or to an alternative accepted destination according to a predetermined procedure, that is, the stored association of a said characteristic with a trip is erased from said server for potential reuse with other new path controlled trips.
  • said cancelation may be performed automatically after a period of time that the trip is not obeying, or not acceptably obeying, according to predetermined procedure to the assigned path associated with a path controlled trip.
  • Fig.3a illustrates schematically a system configuration which from a point of view of a path control center it may communicate directly with C-DNAs through HCTUs or through a PC-DNSS.
  • the system configuration combines the abilities of system configurations illustrated by fig.1 e and fig.1 g.
  • the path control center in Fig.3a may transmit through 210b, for example, data such as assigned paths to path controlled trips to a C-DNA, through an HCTU, and receive through 212 position to destinations requests for a path controlled trip and possibly pre-ordered time related position to destination requests, in addition to said updates on varying positions and possibly destinations during path controlled trip activity, as fig. l.e illustrates.
  • Fig.3a further illustrates access to C-DNAs associated with a PC-DNSS 233a through 234a preferably according to RAPCS.
  • Fig.3a further illustrates an ability to transmit said RAC from a server of, for example, the usage condition layer to the paths planning layer through 250 according to said ACP, wherein the RAC may further be transmitted to 233a through 234a.
  • Fig.3b illustrates schematically a system configuration which differs from fig.3a by applying assignment of path to path controlled trips to a C-DNA through C-DNSS 233b.
  • Fig.3b further illustrates an ability to transmit said RAC from a server of the usage condition layer to the paths planning layer through 250 according to said ACP, wherein the RAC may further be transmitted to 233b through 234b.
  • Fig.3c illustrates schematically a system configuration which differs from Fig. lb by enabling to assign paths to path controlled trips through 233b and 233c wherein 233c handles assignment of paths to its C-DNA users.
  • Fig.3c further illustrates schematically an ability to transmit said RAC from a server of the usage condition layer to the paths planning layer through 250 according to said ACP, wherein the RAC may further be transmitted to 233c through 234c.
  • Fig.3il, fig.3i2 and fig.3i3 are corresponding to fig. lil, fig. li2 and fig. Ii3 wherein the DNA and the toll charging unit in fig.lil, fig.li2 and fig. Ii3 are substituted respectively by C-DNA and by HCTU in fig.3il, fig.3i2 and fig.3i3.
  • the HCTU functionality which is considered as an expansion to an in-vehicle toll changing unit functionality, enables, as described above, to isolate direct access to an in-vehicle C-DNA with respect to assignment of paths associated with path controlled trips, that is, the HCTU receives data related to assignment of paths, from a DNS or from a path control center, and transmits such data to in-vehicle C- DNA - preferably with other data required to maintain guidance of a trip including but not be limited, for example, to background road maps, to overlaid dynamic data on maps, to messages, to decryption key if required according to some embodiments to decrypt encrypted data of assigned path, etc.,.
  • An in-vehicle HCTU or an HCTU functionality may be applied according to some embodiments as an expanded toll charging unit wherein the expanded functionality to the toll charging functionality refers to an ability to support anonymous communication with a path control center (e.g paths planning layer, in addition to traffic mapping layer and possibly traffic prediction layer which a toll charging unit functionality supports) and/or with an acceptable type of a DNS and non anonymous communication with a charging center such as a toll charging system (e.g., usage condition layer) as well as to support acceptably type of driving navigation system.
  • a path control center e.g paths planning layer, in addition to traffic mapping layer and possibly traffic prediction layer which a toll charging unit functionality supports
  • an acceptable type of a DNS and non anonymous communication with a charging center such as a toll charging system (e.g., usage condition layer) as well as to support acceptably type of driving navigation system.
  • an HCTU functionality may be applied as an expansion to a toll charging unit functionality applied with a dedicated mobile device or be integrated as an expanded toll charging functionality that is integrated with other mobile devices, wherein said other mobile devices may but not be limited to include any mobile device such as but limited to a DNA, an infotainment system a black-box etc.
  • HCTU related expansion to the toll charging functionality includes processes associated with anonymous communication with e.g., a paths planning layer functionality, either directly or through an acceptable type of DNS, wherein anonymous communication in general is applied between a mobile device and a path control system e.g., a paths planning layer and/or a traffic mapping layer and/or traffic prediction layer either directly or according to some embodiments indirectly through an acceptable type of DNS, and wherein anonymous communication is typically associated with vehicle position realated data such as for example time related position updates as transmitted from a vehicle to update progress of a path and position to destination pairs as part of a request for a path controlled trip which is also transmitted fron a vehicle, and wherein an HCTU includes with anonymous communication also data associated with receiving path and path updates por a path controlled trip, and wherein such communication according to some embodiments may but not be limited to include:
  • assigned path includes assigned parking place as destination of the path controlled trip in the vicinity of the requested destination,
  • Anonymous communication associated with an HCTU or an HCTU functionality is an expansion to non-anonymous and possibly anonymous communication associated already with a toll charging unit, wherein the expansion mainly relates to transmission of requests for path and reception of path and path updates, and wherein the non-anonymous communication associated with an HCTU or HCTU functionality applies the non anonymous in-vehicle privacy preserving toll charging support functionality.
  • in-vehicle privacy preservation or in-vehicle privacy preservation approach or in- vehicle privacy preserving communication approach and alike used terms should preferably include in a wider sense in-vehicle calculation of a value and transmission of the value from the vehicle as a non- anonymous message to a centralized server or to separated servers, wherein potential association of such non-anonymous messages with anonymous messages that are also transmitted to a centralized server or servers and have interrelated connection with the content of non anonymous messages - should not enable potential deciphering of identity of anonymous messages by potential association of said centralized received anonymous and non-anonymous messages.
  • the content of a non anonymous message and communication medium related data should not enable said potential deciphering wherein the content of a non-anonymous message should exclude privacy related details which anonymous messages may include.
  • the content of a non-anonymous message associated with said in-vehicle privacy preservation approach should but not be limited to exclude for example time related position or positions of the vehicle that may be included in the content of anonymous messages, wherein according to some embodiments said exclusion refers even to ambiguous time related position or positions such as for example a presence of the vehicle on a network link or network links with or without time related data, and wherein according to some embodiments said exclusion may refer even to position or positions without time relation, or without relation to a certain period of time such as for example daily time or time interval according to some embodiments.
  • Such prevention of potential deciphering of real identity that is not exposed by anonymous message through the content of a non anonymous message may for example be applied with respect to privacy preserving toll charging by calculating a toll charge amount associated with an event of deviation of a vehicle from a path that should be developed according to a path controlled trip and transmitting the amount to a toll charging system without associating privacy related data such as position or positions related data associated for example with the event in the content of the transmitted message and which the content of such message may refer to a privacy preserving content transmitted by non anonymous communication,
  • said in-vehicle calculation may further be expanded to include fine charge amount calculation and/or a privilege credit change amount associated with deviation of a vehicle from a path that should be developed according to a path controlled trip, and wherein said calculated amount is transmitted as a non anonymous privacy preserving message content by an in-vehicle toll charging unit functionality or by an HCTU functionality, for example, to a toll charging system server (e.g., applied by a usage condition layer server).
  • a toll charging system server e.g., applied by a usage condition layer server.
  • an expansion to a toll-charging unit functionality or an HCTU- functionality may include calculation of fine amount and/or calculation of credit change amount and further transmission of such amount as a non anonymous privacy preserving message content to an expanded toll charging system (e.g., applied by usage condition layer), and wherein the in-vehicle unit functionality that may apply said expanded functionalities refers for simplicity to a toll charging unit which an HCTU as well and which such simplified terms are applicable with any relevant described embodiments, and wherein a charging system (toll charging center) that receives non anonymous messages with said privacy preserving content, which may include toll amount and/or fine amount and/or credit change amount, may refer to an expanded toll charging system or for simplicity to a toll charging system wherein such simplified term is applicable to represent said expanded toll charging system (center) with described embodiments.
  • an expanded toll charging system e.g., applied by usage condition layer
  • Transmission of non-anonymous message with said privacy preserving content of non anonymous messages may not be sufficient to apply said in-vehicle privacy preservation approach that may not enable potential deciphering of identity of anonymous messages by potential association of said centralized received anonymous and non-anonymous messages, wherein commercial mobile communication networks that support mobile internet are used for example with Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) or by Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs) services of e.g., GPRS, 3G, LTE etc.
  • MNOs Mobile Network Operators
  • MVNOs Mobile Virtual Network Operators
  • the potential built-in freedom associated with usage of a commercial mobile communication network should be limited in a manner that may enable to preserve said objective of not enabling potential deciphering of identity of anonymous messages by potential association of said centralized received anonymous and non-anonymous messages with respect to potential freedom to use the Internet protocol and potential freedom to use SIM profile or eSIM profiles (herein after SIM or eSIM profile) which is a further limitation to the limit on the content of a non anonymous message (privacy preserving content).
  • transmission of anonymous and non anonymous messages from a vehicle by for example a toll charging unit or a toll charging unit functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality using available commercial mobile networks that support mobile Internet (provided for example by Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) or by Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs) with e.g., GPRS, 3G, LTE etc,), may raise issues that may enable potential deciphering of identity of anonymous messages by potential association of said centralized received anonymous and non-anonymous messages according to communication medium usage (rather than just said message content related data).
  • MNOs Mobile Network Operators
  • MVNOs Mobile Virtual Network Operators
  • potential centralized association of interrelated anonymous and non anonymous communication according to communication medium related data may enable potential deciphering of identity of anonymous messages by potential association of said centralized received anonymous and non-anonymous messages and which data refers to:
  • a possibility to use common IP address assigned to a mobile device e.g., a client IP address assigned to a mobile device in case that a client server architecture is used
  • anonymous and non anonymous communication e.g., by time sharing through a single transceiver
  • IP addresses assigned to a mobile device e.g., client IP addresses in case that a client server architecture is used
  • client IP addresses in case that a client server architecture is used
  • anonymous and non anonymous communication applied e.g., with separated mobile transceivers
  • consistently related IP addresses e.g., random but consistently related IP addresses
  • a mobile device e.g., client IP addresses in case that a client server architecture is used
  • consistently related IP addresses records of anonymous and non anonymous communication may indicate on interrelation
  • said non logically and non consistently related IP addresses are assigned to a mobile device for anonymous and non anonymous communication wherein the assignment is applied according to some embodiments by dynamic allocation process that assigns IP addresses to a mobile device from a pool of available addresses through a mobile communication network.
  • an assigned IP address may according to some embodiments serve as a client IP address in a client server architecture, wherein said non consistency may according to some embodiments be applied by a reset to a transceiver of the HCTU in order that the transceiver will be assigned with a new IP address by said dynamic allocation of IP addresses whereas according to some embodiments if the same IP address is assigned after a reset then a further reset is performed preferably with a delay associated with reactivation of a MAC (Medium Access Control procedure) and whereas according to some embodiments a virtually randomly assigned IP address is performed by a process on the side of the assigning facility of IP addresses to mobile devices that at least disables to reassign the same IP address to the same HCTU after said reset, for example by using a sufficient time delay,
  • MAC Medium Access Control procedure
  • separated SIM and/or eSIM profiles serve the anonymous and the non anonymous communication
  • the SIM or eSIM profile that serves the anonymous transmission is a preferably a privately owned SIM or eSIM profile (i.e., the SIM or eSIM profile that is not owned by an authority that is related to the operation of the path control or to its operation agent), and wherein according to some embodiments a non privately owned SIM or eSIM profile serves the non anonymous communication, and wherein according to some embodiments separated transceivers are associated with the separated SIM or eSIM profiles,
  • said ACP associated with RAC may be applied with shorter time delay under continuous communication, wherein no MAC (Medium Access Control procedure) is required due to transition from anonymous to non anonymous communication and vice versa.
  • MAC Medium Access Control procedure
  • a single transceiver is used with said separated SIM or eSIM profiles requiring according to some embodiments to assign said non logically and non consistently related IP addresses for anonymous and for non anonymous communication by for example a reset to the transceiver, wherein as a result of a reset an IP address may be assigned virtually randomly to the HCTU through a mobile communication network from a pool of IP addresses whereas according to some embodiments if the same IP address is assigned after a reset then a further reset is performed preferably with a delay associated with reactivation of a MAC (Medium Access Control) procedure and whereas according to some embodiments a virtually randomly assigned IP address is applied by a virtually random assignment process on the side of the assigning facility of IP addresses that at least disables to reassign the same IP address to the same HCTU after said reset.
  • MAC Medium Access Control
  • said possible assignments of IP addresses and/or said possibilities to associate SIM and/or eSIM profiles with assigned IP addresses either with a single or with separated transceivers is applicable to any relevant described embodiments hereinafter and above wherein anonymous and non anonymous communication are applied with a vehicle.
  • transmission of anonymous messages from a mobile device addresses a server of an acceptable type of DNS whereas according to some other embodiments the transmission addresses a path control center server(s),
  • some or all said anonymous communication is applied by an acceptable type of a DNA.
  • said limitations on assignments of mobile device IP address and said limitations on SIM or eSIM profile owner is also maintained in case of usage of a DNA to perform anonymous related communication.
  • the SIM or eSIM profile associated with non anonymous commutation is a said privately owned SIM or eSIM profile wherein according to some embodiments charged usage of the non anonymous communication is paid or subsidized by authorities or their agent that maintains said path control operation,
  • erasure or prevention of records of an IP address or IP addresses, assigned to a mobile device by mobile network facilities is performed on the mobile network facilities (if applicable) by a respective process, wherein said erasure or prevention of records enables to use a single SIM or eSIM profile with anonymous and non anonymous communication (if acceptable by a MNO or a MVNO and by home land security authorities), and wherein said single SIM or eSIM profile may be applied either with said single transceiver or with said separated transceivers under said limitations to assign IP addresses that prevents from potential association of anonymous and non anonymous communication related data to decipher identity of anonymous communication.
  • anonymous and the term non anonymous communication associated with said in-vehicle privacy preserving approach may further refer to any possible level of consideration of described constraints preferably required with privacy preserving approach, wherein the higher the level of said constraints associated with an implementation the lower is the potential to decipher identity of non anonymous communication.
  • expansion toll charging system may further be applied according to some embodiments with any relevant described embodiments hereinafter and above with respect to a need to use in-vehicle privacy preserving charging and/or in-vehicle privacy preserving credit change updates according to an identity which for example may be a vehicle identity or a vehicle owner identity,
  • said anonymous communication activity associated with a vehicle may be shared for example between a said acceptable type of DNA and a toll charging unit functionality or a said acceptable type of DNA and an HCTU functionality, wherein a toll charging unit functionality or an HCTU functionality apply said non anonymous communication, and wherein an integration of a DNA functionality with toll charging unit functionality or a DNA functionality with an
  • HCTU functionality in a single mobile device may apply anonymous and non anonymous communication in a more flexible sharing form.
  • any mobile device for which the issue of preventing centralized association of interrelated anonymous and non anonymous communication should be relevant may according to some embodiments be applied with relevant in-vehicle apparatus configurations that is or may be associated with different embodiments, hereinafter and above, while applying said in-vehicle privacy preserving communication approach.
  • the privacy preservation approach may be associated with privileged tolling (such as free of charge toll or toll discount), applied in order to encourage usage of path controlled trips, which may be expanded to include in-vehicle privacy preserving fine charging and/or in- vehicle credit change image management.
  • Credit change management refers to an ability to manage the change in the credit and further to update the balance on a centralized server
  • credit change image management refers to the image of the in vehicle changes in the credit and updated balance on a centralized server.
  • the credit change and related events stored in a central storage of for example an expanded toll charging system, may enable to manage potential user clarifying appeal and/or recovering from a malfunction associated with an in-vehicle unit, wherein for example a need to replace an in vehicle unit may be supported by setting the credit balance in a new vehicular unit according to a copy of the balance stored in a centralized system.
  • in-vehicle privacy preserving approach with non anonymous communication disables by definition to include position or time related position data as well as according to some embodiments even ambiguous time related position or positions.
  • Non-anonymous communication which is applied between a mobile device applying toll charging unit or HCTU functionality and, for example, a charging system such as a toll charging system or an expanded toll charging system enabling to apply fine charging and credit change image management (applied e.g., by a usage condition layer), supports in this respect in-vehicle privacy preserving approach with respect to toll charging and/or to fine charging and/or to credit change image management.
  • Said toll and/or fine charge and/or credit change image management central related system which may refer to an in-vehicle privacy preserving charging support centralized system or, for simplicity, to an expanded toll charging system or to an expanded toll charging center (applied e.g., by a respective expanded usage condition layer), is associated according to some embodiments with toll charging and fine charging related processes or toll charging and credit change image management related processes or toll and fine charging and credit change image management related processes.
  • each charge related event and/or credit change image managing related event that is detected and determined on the side of a vehicle for example by a toll charging unit or a toll charging unit functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality, is stored with time related event position or positions in order to enable an appeal to be applied according to time or time interval related stamp.
  • time or time interval stamp which is related to an event is associated with calculated amount of charge or calculated credit charge by a toll charging unit or a toll charging unit functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality and wherein such data is transmitted with non anonymous communication to for example an expanded toll charging system (applied e.g., by expanded usage condition layer) and stored on a central storage, applying in-vehicle privacy preserving charge and/or change of credit by said in-vehicle privacy preserving approach.
  • the time stamped related charging amount or time stamped credit change stored in a central storage of for example said expanded toll charging system may be informed to the vehicle owner enabling to decide accordingly about whether to apply a clarification appeal.
  • a clarification appeal associated with the time stamped charge or time stamped change of credit, or potential time stamped charge or potential time stamped change in credit provides allowance to retrieve from the in-vehicle storage, such as for example from a toll charging unit or from a toll charging unit functionality or from an HCTU or from an HCTU functionality storage, event related details for further clarification procedure, wherein according to some embodiments the retrieval is a remote retrieval applied for example through said expanded toll charging system respective facilities,
  • a Receiving by an in-vehicle HCTU functionality anonymous identity , wherein according to some embodiments the anonymous identity is a dynamically assigned IP address to the HCTU functionality for anonymous communication, wherein according to some embodiments further to the IP an anonymous identity is assigned by a remote server to and received by the HCTU functionality which anonymous identity is preferably associated by a path control center wherein according to some embodiments the reception of the anonymous identity is a result of RAR applied by a vehicle in order to be served by a path controlled trip, and wherein according to some embodiments authentication of the HCTU is applied by said RAR associated with ARC, b.
  • the paths and updated paths are encrypted paths which according to some embodiments the HCTU functionality may decrypt according to a decryptions key which the HCTU functionality has received according to some embodiments from a path control center using non anonymous communication, and wherein according to some other embodiments the encrypted path and the decryption key which are received by the HCTU functionality are transmitted by the HCTU functionality to the C-DNA for decryption by the C-DNA, wherein according to some embodiments ACP is used with authentication of served path controlled trip during a trip which may according to some embodiment strengthen an ARC authentication.
  • HCTU functionality According to a change in the destination of the path controlled trip, receiving by the HCTU functionality an updated destination, for example from a DNA or a C-DNA functionality, and transmitting by said HCTU functionality the destination update to a path control center using said anonymous communication.
  • HCTU tolling functionality Determining by said HCTU tolling functionality, toll charging value and/or fine value and or change in privilege credit value, according to a level of a match performed by said comparison and according to predetermined criteria, wherein said determination may refer according to a match to confirmed free of charge toll or privileged toll or full toll charge or unknown toll related conditions, and wherein tolerated tolling according to some embodiments is applied with respect to said credit associated with deviation of trips from assigned paths to path controlled trips (disobedience), and wherein the value of tolling to be charged is determined according to privilege credit determination.
  • said in-vehicle HCTU functionality apparatus applies the said method by an apparatus which may but not be limited to comprise:
  • said predictive path control which its efficiency level depends on the quality of time dependent traffic predictions and which the quality level depends on the level of share of the vehicles that are using pre-scheduled trips (enabling to guarantee higher time dependent resolution of predicted entries to a controlled network than statistical based demand predictions may provide), may under lack of pre-scheduled trips, or under insufficient percentage of pre-scheduled trips in the anticipated traffic, be supported by traffic lights controlled entries to the part of a network wherein path control is applied.
  • the traffic lights may maintain queues at entry points to said controlled part of a network which their lengths are preferably planned to be longer than the departure from a queue allows.
  • Such controlled entries on the network may but not be limited to include traffic which arrives to a city in which said predictive path control is applied and intra-city exits from highways and possibly also in entries to and exits from parking lots etc.
  • the efficiency of the current traffic flow may be degraded while making the actual entries more predictable and the efficiency of the predictive path control to be improved.
  • traffic light control at an entry point to the controlled network, by predictive path control, is adaptive to the statistical predictions of arrivals to a said entry enabling to increase the prediction resolution for a cost of some delay at a said entry point.
  • a further issue which may have a major effect on time saving from personal and public points of view refers to the issue of searching for a parking place in urban areas, and which issue is a further issue to issues associated with travel time savings by traffic load balancing.
  • Searching for parking places is a known issue in urban areas that negatively affects the arrival time to the destination in terms of absolute time and in terms of relative weight of the time required to arrive to a required destination.
  • the relative average weight of the time required to search for a parking place near a required destination may according to some surveys reach a level of tens of percents of the travel time of an average intra-city trip. This issue has negative effect not just on vehicle users but also on the public interest which refers to economical aspect related to value of travel time savings.
  • search for parking places at the end of trips, near required destinations may be resolved or at least be reduced by the support of apparatus and methods of path control system enabling to encourage usage of path controlled trips by incentives applied for example by privileged tolling encouraging usage of path controlled trips and obedience to dynamic path assignment to such controlled trips, which may be interpreted from the point of view of applied non usage of, or non full obedience to, path controlled trips, as negative incentives to discourage such non usage or non obedience.
  • path controlled trips which may be generated by incentive(s) to apply usage by almost all potential users, and which may be expected to include a need for parking at the end of the trips, may take benefit of the ability to efficiently map occupancy and availability of parking places by the usage of such controlled trips and to further efficiently manage assignment of parking places to path controlled trips with the aim to shorten arrival times to destinations rather than to just shorten trip times.
  • the issue of searching for parking places in case that there are available parking places or known becoming available places, may be shortened by the ability to efficiently map available parking places and accordingly to assign parking places to path controlled trips, as a complementary part of the operation of said path control.
  • robust reservation of an available parking place assigned to a path controlled trip may be applied for example by applying negative monetary incentive which fines non authorized parking in assigned parking places, by users or potential users of path controlled trips, through the support of a vehicular charging unit or a functionality of a vehicular charging unit, such as for example a toll charging unit or a toll charging unit functionality or an HCTU an HCTU functionality, which may support fine charge due to non authorized parking as an expansion to toll charging - making for example a toll charging center to become a toll/fine charging center.
  • Massive installed base of in-vehicle toll charging units and/or in-vehicle HCTU which provides a potential efficient means to identify non cooperative behavior and which enables to discourage such behavior by applying for example negative incentives which may include cancelation of entitlement for privileges (entitled with cooperative behavior) and/or even to charge fine for non cooperative behavior.
  • non cooperative act may include avoidance to contribute to traffic predictions, for example avoiding to apply prescheduled request for path controlled trips, and/or parking in anon authorized parking place which such non cooperative behavior negatively affects assignments of parking places to path controlled trips and further negatively affects potential assignments of parking places to path controlled trips according to expected availability of parking places.
  • data about available or becoming available parking places are received by a path control system server(s) directly from vehicles, which are guided or may potentially be guided according to path controlled trips, and/or indirectly from one or more external servers that are managed dependently on, or independently of, an operation of path controlled trips.
  • available or becoming available parking places are received and stored by the path control system in a storage wherein the storage, which hereinafter refers to Parking Places Managing Storage (PPMS) which includes status of parking places that inter-alia includes availability status and non occupied but assigned parking places to path controlled trips as well as other supplementary data associated with managing parking places according to described embodiments, may be accessed, for example, by processes of a paths planning layer or a functionality of a paths planning layer and/or by any processes that are relevant to apply mapping of availability of parking places and assignment of parking places by, and/or for, a path control system.
  • PPMS Parking Places Managing Storage
  • said parking places may refer to parking places which are available or may be expected to be available within a parking lot, and/or to parking places which independently of a parking lot are available or may expected to be available.
  • availability may also refer to becoming available parking places which virtually are available to be assigned to path controlled trips according to their expected arrival time to such parking places, and according to some embodiment also according to tolerated waiting time to park in a becoming available parking place which tolerated waiting time exceeds the arrival time.
  • the path control system may have direct access, or indirect access to the PPMS, enabling the path control system to manage directly or indirectly data related to availability of parking places and assignment of available parking places to path control trips.
  • Assignment of parking places to path controlled trips may be applied sequentially per a single path controlled trip or, according to some embodiments, in parallel by assigning a plurality of available parking places to a plurality of path control trips at a time. Assignment of a plurality of available parking places should preferably maintain a need that the number of path controlled trips do not exceed the number of available parking places. In case that there are no sufficiently available parking places then according to some embodiments priority may be applied according to First In First Out (FIFO) request service and/or according to some embodiments priority may be applied according to priority rules which may refer to provision of priority associated with encouraging usage of path controlled trips as further described and/or according to any other rules.
  • FIFO First In First Out
  • data about available parking places may be generated by external sources and/or be generated by vehicles using path controlled trips, wherein generated data that determine available parking places are received and stored by a path control system directly or indirectly in a PPMS.
  • path control system directly or indirectly in a PPMS.
  • the condition of massive usage of path controlled trips for example, under privileged tolling applied with the support of, for example, a usage condition layer, may contribute further to generate conditions to map efficiently available parking places by vehicles which are implementing or may potentially implement path control trips.
  • the key element to map availability of parking places while applying path controlled trips with privileged tolling is a massively installed base of vehicular platform which may refer but not be limited to said toll charging units or said functionalities of toll charging units or said HCTUs or said functionalities of HCTUs or DNAs or functionalities of DNAs in vehicles.
  • Such units or functionalities may interact with a path control system (e.g., paths planning layer) that preferably is applied also with mapping availability of parking places, wherein the toll charging unit and/or the HCTU, as well as the path control system (e.g., paths planning layer) and the toll charging center (e.g., usage condition layer), may further be expanded to support complementary parking related processes that enable to efficiently assign parking places to paths of path-controlled trips.
  • a massively installed base of such units enabling to discourage potential disobedience to path controlled trips, creates prime conditions for mapping available parking places and further to assign parking places to path controlled trips.
  • Such installed base is upgraded to support such as objective.
  • a toll charging unit or a functionality of a toll-charging unit or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality is expanded by one or more parking related processes that may but not be limited to include: processes associated with mapping availability-status of parking places and/or processes associated with mapping new potential parking places and/or processes associated with managing tolling and tolerated tolling of path controlled trips with relation to search for parking places, and/or processes associated with managing fines for unauthorized usage of parking places and/or processes associated with charging parking time cost and/or processes associated with charging fine for non authorized usage of a parking place.
  • Such upgraded units or upgraded functionalities of such units may refer respectively with further description to a Toll Charging Unit (TCU) with Parking Support (PS), hereinafter TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality, or to an HCTU with Parking Support (PS), hereinafter HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality, wherein the extension of "PS” stands for "Parking Support” related processes associated with a Toll Charging Unit (TCU) or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality.
  • TCU Toll Charging Unit
  • PS Parking Support
  • HCTU-PS HCTU-PS
  • HCTU-PS HCTU-PS functionality
  • a parking support related process may refer to a parking status informing process, which according to some embodiments transmits to a path control system data about time related departure of a vehicle from a parking place or about time related arrival of a vehicle to a parking place, and which the transmission of such data by a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality and the reception of such data by a path control system - updates according to some embodiments the availability of parking places in a PPMS.
  • a parking status informing process associated with a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality may according to some embodiments be expanded further by a status-detection process, wherein a status detection process is fed by data which determines the vehicle position, for example, through an in-vehicle position tracking process associated with or received by a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality and, accordingly, the process detects an exit or an entry of a vehicle from/to a parking place which could be / is the destination of a path controlled trip.
  • the status-detection process associated with a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU- PS or an HCTU-PS functionality applies, according to some embodiments, comparison between the in vehicle tracked position and data about the assigned destination, which is a parking place assigned as a destination to a path controlled trip that is received for example as part of the path which is used to handle obedience related processes by a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality, and according to the comparison determining whether occupancy of a parking place is performed.
  • a disobedience informing process is performed which may include, in addition to potential disobedience toll charge for deviation from the path that should have to be developed according to a path controlled trip, a potential fine charge due to non authorized parking if the parking place is found to be assigned to another path controlled trip that hasn't arrived yet to its parking destination.
  • Fine charging similar to toll charging, is applied according to some embodiments with said in- vehicle privacy preserving approach, wherein privacy preserving incentive related processes associated with toll charging while enabling to maintain robust anonymous operation of path-controlled trips are expanded to include fine charging according to said in-vehicle privacy preserving approach constraints.
  • In-vehicle privacy preservation is characterized in this respect by performing in-vehicle calculation of a potential fine charge according to time related position and further transmitting the amount of the charge to a charging center using said in-vehicle privacy preserving approach.
  • Such in-vehicle privacy preservation may enable to overcome potential weakness associated with an alternative to apply centralized privacy preservation approach, wherein identity associated with time related position or positions should be transmitted to a center in order to calculate a charge and further to store personal and time related position data, or time related positions data, with the charged amount for a case that appeal will be applied.
  • Such centralized approach makes a centralized storage vulnerable to hacking and possibly to other potential illegal actions that may further be associated with potential big syndrome.
  • Such syndrome is a more acute issue with centralized privacy preserving approach at a time when, for example, said discounted toll charge is applied in order to dilute demand of path-controlled trip.
  • said discounted toll charge is applied in order to dilute demand of path-controlled trip.
  • any or some of the embodiments associated with monetary and possibly with non-monetary management of positive and/or negative incentives may preferably enable to apply, according to demand, in-vehicle privacy preservation approach rather than, or as a complementary option to, central privacy preserving approach that may according to some embodiments support some share of the vehicles on the network if it may be applicable.
  • Such possible hybrid of in-vehicle and centralized privacy preservation according to which for example ambiguities about time related position or time related positions are transmitted to a charging center, has two weaknesses which one of them refers to potential lack of detailed records of time related position or time related positions required to support clarification according to a potential appeal and which the other one refers to privacy preservation.
  • Privacy preservation weaknesses in this respect may refer as mentioned above to a situation according to which even ambiguous time related position or positions that are associated with an identity may mutually be associated with time related position or positions that are associated with anonymous communication, enabling to make the anonymous communication to be non anonymous.
  • a hybrid approach may be applied, according to demand, wherein ambiguous time related position or time related positions, associated with for example vehicle or vehicle owner identifying related data, is transmitted from a vehicle to a centralized charging center, and wherein the center calculates and stores such details with the calculated charge amount.
  • the path control system transmits accordingly an update to a vehicular unit or a vehicular unit functionality in order generate fine charging in case of a non authorized parking.
  • the vehicular unit or vehicular unit functionality may be for example a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality.
  • a fine charging related message applies according to some embodiments a fine charge according to said in-vehicle privacy preserving approach constraints.
  • said update about non-authorized parking location received by in-vehicle apparatus from a path control center uses anonymous communication.
  • the anonymous update is characterized by being parking place location exposing related data and not vehicle identifying related data.
  • detection of non-authorized parking is performed by a path control center that has access to tracked path controlled trip and to the content of the PPMS.
  • the content of the PPMS includes assigned parking places to path-controlled trips as further described in more details.
  • the detection of a non-authorized parking starts by identifying a potential parking action in a location that is not assigned as a parking place to a path controlled trip, for example, according to or as part of anonymous time related position tracking associated with the path control operation, wherein stoppage time duration that exceeds a certain time limit indicates on potential parking.
  • determination of a potential parking as a non-authorized parking is further performed by the path control system that determines whether a parking action is an authorized parking or a non-authorized parking according to initiation a match process between the identified potential parking and parking places marked as assigned parking places in a PPMS.
  • said update is transmitted, for example, by transmitting to a respective vehicle, through anonymous communication associate for example with its position tracking, an update about a non-authorized parking.
  • a fine charge process is applied, preferably after a ignoring a warning message that has transmitted to the DNA or DNA application, and reassignment of a parking place is further applied with respect to the vehicle to which a non applicable parking place is assigned.
  • a potential non authorized parking action starts with a detection of a stoppage by a vehicular charging apparatus according to a predetermined stoppage time limit, such as for example by a TCU or by a TCU functionality or by an HCTU or bt an HCTU functionality or by a TCU-PS or by a TCU-PS functionality or by an HCTU-PS or by an HCTU-PS functionality, as part of for example said anonymous position tracking applied to enable toll charging by said in-vehicle privacy preserving approach.
  • detection of stoppage that exceeds predetermined time limit may indicate on potential parking in a place that is known to be not the parking place assigned to the path controlled trip.
  • an anonymous message is transmitted, for example, to a path control center in order to check whether the location of the stoppage is performed in a non authorized parking place (an assigned parking place to a path controlled trip that hasn't arrived yet to its parking place).
  • the path control system determines whether the parking is performed in an authorized parking place or not. According to the determination, a response update, which is transmitted through anonymous communication to the respective vehicle, informs for example to a driver or an automomous vehicle that the parking is performed in a non-authorized parking place or otherwise informing that the parking is a non assigned (free) parking place or is an unknown parking place for which fine charging may not be relevant.
  • the update received from a path control center (e.g., a paths planning layer), using anonymous communication, is characterized by being parking place location related data and not vehicle identifying data as mentioned above and as further described in more details,
  • said response update or said update, transmitted from a path controlled center to the vehicle is received by a DNA or a DNA application a C-DNA or a C-DNA application which further transmits the said response or said update to the vehicular unit or vehicular unit functionality, such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality applying further fine charge related processes, and wherein according to such embodiments said vehicular unit or unit functionality performs non anonymous communication associated with said fine charging message,
  • the vehicular unit performs in this respect said anonymous and said non anonymous communication in which case the anonymous communication is associated with a path control center whereas the non anonymous communication is associated with a toll charging center.
  • said response or said update involves a warning process through a DNA or a DNA functionality before a fine charge is performed, preferably noting about potential fine that will be charged if the place will not be unoccupied in a certain time limit.
  • a fine charge process is triggered through communication between the DNA and a vehicular charging support unit or a charging unit functionality such as for example a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality applying further fine charge related processes.
  • said detected location of a non authorized parking which is stored according to said update or said response update in a vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality, such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality applying further fine charge related processes, enables further to read such data, for example for personal reasons or for a reason of submitting an appeal, through for example a user interface associated with a DNA or a DNA application or a C-DNA or a C-DNA application, using communication with a vehicular unit or a functionality of a vehicular unit through for example Bluetooth communication or directly if the DNA and the charging support vehicular unit are integrated in a single unit.
  • a vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU
  • Said charging support vehicular unit or a functionality of a charging support vehicular unit is according to some embodiments a vehicular unit or a vehicular unit functionality, such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality expanded by respective processes to enable privacy preserving fine processes according to said in-vehicle privacy preserving approach as part of the privacy preserving negative incentive monetary (fine) charging support.
  • a vehicular unit or a vehicular unit functionality such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality expanded by respective processes to enable privacy preserving fine processes according to said in-vehicle privacy preserving approach as part of the privacy preserving negative incentive monetary (fine) charging support.
  • said anonymous communication to/from a vehicle which includes trip related data such as time related varying positions of a vehicle on a road network and/or time related presence of a vehicle on a link and/or links on the network and/or time related parking place of a vehicle, may refer in general to position related data or to time related position mentioned hereinafter and above.
  • the vehicle apparatus in this respect may but not be limited to include for example a Smartphone, an infotainment system, a vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality.
  • a vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality.
  • a vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality, which according to different embodiments use non-anonymous communication and according to some embodiments applies further fine charge related processes, uses in this respect to in-vehicle privacy preserving approach with either a personally owned or a non personally owned SIM profile. For example with a M2M SIM card, or a personally owned or a non personally owned SIM or eSIM profile.
  • a system configuration according to which a Smartphone is used with a DNA application or a C-DNA application, performing said anonymous communication between a vehicle and a path control center according to in-vehicle privacy preserving approach constraints, and wherein a vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality, such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality applying further said fine charge related processes according to in-vehicle privacy preserving approach constraints, a SIM or an eSIM profile used with the anonymous communication may have different ownership from a SIM or eSIM profile used with the non anonymous communication, and wherein the Smartphone should be a said personally owned SIM or eSIM profile whereas the a vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality SIM or eSIM profile may be a non personally owned SIM or eSIM profile owned for example by an
  • SIM or the eSIM profile associated with for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU- PS or an HCTU-PS functionality applying further said fine charge related processes that may support fine charging, is according to some embodiments a single SIM or eSIM profile that may be a personally owned or a non personally owned SIM or eSIM profile.
  • the SIM or eSIM profile that is associated with the mobile or vehicular device is applied as a said personally owned SIM or eSIM profile associated with an additional protecting procedure in order to enable said in-vehicle privacy preserving approach to be applied.
  • the additional protecting procedure should enable random or virtual random relation between a mobile/vehicular IP address assigned to anonymous communication and a mobile/vehicilar IP address assigned to non-anonymous communication.
  • non authorized parking placed associated with in-vehicle privacy preserving fine charge applied according to in -vehicle privacy preserving approach should not be associated with non anonymous communication and, in general, time related to vehicle position or positions or even such ambiguous data should also not be associated with non anonymous communication.
  • time related to presence on a link or to presence in a small zone (or vice versa) on the network should preferably not be associated with a non anonymous charging in order to guarantee privacy preservation of anonymous communication.
  • non anonymous data message transmitted from the vehicle may be characterized according to some embodiments by being charging related data message and not time related position or positions data message.
  • Charging according to such data message may for example be a charge amount enabling for example to handle potential differentiation in charging fines for non authorized parking according to different zones or different classes of zones or different classes of position.
  • a message indicating that a fine charge should be performed is transmitted in case that there is no differentiation between parking places with respect to a fine charge.
  • monetary charging is applied by a vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality, such as for example a TCU or a TCU functionality or an HCTU or an HCTU functionality or a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality applying further said fine charge related processes,
  • other functionalities may also be applied with a said charging unit or a said charging unit functionality in order to provide more secured path control operation associated with incentives.
  • a DNA or a C-DNA functionality may be applied as an integrated part of a said vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality in order to guarantee the highest level of secured operation and therefore the highest level of acceptance.
  • a DNA or a C-DNA functionality may be applied as an integrated part of a said vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality in order to guarantee the highest level of secured operation and therefore the highest level of acceptance.
  • a parking charging for authorized parking or parking time may be applied separately from a toll fine charging center, that is through existing means which includes existing applications and systems to charge for parking or parking time. Such separation may enable to maintain privacy preservation of the path control operation, wherein positions of parking places should not be exposed to the toll fine charging center but to independent existing means.
  • a toll fine charging center may for example be applied as an agent of entities that own or are authorized to charge for parking or parking time in certain places, or according to some embodiments a toll fine charging center may include servers which may serve charging for parking or parking time while privacy may still be preserved.
  • a toll fine charging center may include servers which may serve charging for parking or parking time while privacy may still be preserved.
  • non exposure of the parking place that its time and place may be recorded in the in vehicle charging unit or charging unit functionality for potential clarification due to a potential appeal may be used with in-vehicle privacy preservation charging approach.
  • high trust should be built in in-vehicle privacy preserving approach with respect to charge for parking or parking time wherein the charge in may be some cases critical to justify an economical operation.
  • mapping parking places may further take benefit of massive usage of path controlled trips which are encouraged for example by privileged tolling.
  • a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality associated with a vehicle may in this respect be expanded to report on a stoppage of a vehicle which may indicate according to the time length of the stoppage about a new potential unknown parking place and accordingly to trigger a procedure of updating the PPMS with a new parking place wherein the procedure may include visual confirmation that the indication on potential parking place is a parking place that should be mapped in the PPMS.
  • the potential need to map a new unknown parking place is supported by a search for a match between the stoppage place indication and pre-mapped parking places in the PPMS, and if no match is found then a procedure to map a potential mapping unknown parking place may be triggered.
  • Further data that preferably should be associated with pre-mapped parking places in the PPMS may but not be limited to include time related parking costs per parking place, if there is any associated cost, and if relevant also time related parking permission in parking places or in parking lots wherein parking lots or parking regions may be restricted to certain groups of people during certain times. For example, parking at the evening in certain places may be restricted to vehicles which their owners are living nearby a certain neighborhood, or , for example, parking during working hours near a working region may be restricted to vehicles which their owners are working in a nearby place or neighborhood.
  • a toll charging unit or an HCTU or an in-vehicle TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an in-vehicle HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality which performs position related processes, receives the location of the vehicle from an in-unit or in-vehicle GNSS receiver apparatus or from an autonomous vehicle localization apparatus, or from any other vehicle localization apparatus.
  • said unit or unit functionality may but not be limited to be an integrated part of said external unit or be integrated with an apparatus of autonomous vehicles which localize the vehicle according to vehicular sensors.
  • ambiguous locations in a PPMS may be managed for example with respect to a pool of adjacent or nearby locations.
  • the number of available parking places in a pool or in nearby locations is more significant than a specific location for the assignment of parking places to path control trips, therefore, if 2 or more parking places may not be accurately distinguishable from a point of view of a path control system then available parking places are managed as a pool in the PPMS.
  • a pool of available parking places are marked in a PPMS as available parking places with respect to a pool and as long as the pool contains available parking places such parking places may be assigned to path controlled trips according to a need.
  • In-vehicle localization by autonomous vehicles may enable high mapping accuracy of available or becoming available parking places.
  • substantial accurate location of a parking place and further substantial accurate indoor navigation abilities may enable according to some embodiments to manage said assignment of concrete parking places as a destinations to path controlled trips and as well as guidance to such destination in roofed parking lots.
  • report on an available parking place to a path control system may be applied automatically at the time after the vehicle starts a path controlled trip.
  • report on an available parking place to a path control system may be applied automatically at the time after the vehicle starts a path controlled trip.
  • a predetermined expanded tracking process which indicates that the vehicle has left its origin by a distance which may be considered as a distance that may acceptably assure that the parking place is available or becoming available in an acceptable time period.
  • such indication is transmitted to a path control system, enabling the path control system to consider that the position or the space related to the origin of a path controlled trip can be compared with potential parking places stored in the PPMS by a respective search process in order to determine availability. If according to the search result the trip origin is identified to be a parking place then the parking place is marked as an available parking place in the PPMS.
  • confirmation about the availability of the parking place is further requested from the vehicle before marking the parking place as an available parking place, for example through the user interface of the DNA.
  • a report on a location of an available or an expected to be available parking place may be applied by a user interface associated with a DNA according to which a request for a path controlled trip by a user is associated with a request from the user to confirm that his parking place can be assigned to other vehicles after departure to a requested destination of a path controlled trip.
  • a user response may be applicable for marking status of expected to be available parking place which enables the path control system to consider earlier availability of a parking place in comparison to a possibility to rely just on an automatic report according to a departure from a parking place.
  • this may include a request from a potential path control trip user to estimate the departure time or the delay in a trip that should be expected, wherein according to some embodiments such a time delay should preferably associated with limited guaranteed level according to confidence of the requester in order to be rewarded further by privileges according to privilege provision criteria. This may be applied for example with a request for a prescheduled trip.
  • automatic detection of the departure time which may found to substantially match the estimated departure and which may be applies with prescheduled requests for path controlled trips as well as with non prescheduled requests, entitles the vehicle or the vehicle user with some privilege.
  • Such privilege may refer according to some embodiments to one or more types of privileges which may but not be limited to include provision of parking credit which may enable to reduce current or even future parking costs and/or provision of said tolling credit, wherein provision of credit may preferably be higher for a higher match degree between estimated and actual departure times.
  • provision of monetary credit privilege the generated value of time associated with shortening travel times on a network, which is recognized by governments, may provide a resource.
  • traffic predictions applied by a DTA according to current and predicted demand of path controlled trips which demand may include path controlled trips according to current requests and according to prescheduled requests for path controlled trips as well as according to statistically predicted path controlled and non path controlled trips, is applied according to a multiple DTA traffic predictions simulation runs from which runs the average is taken for said predictive path control.
  • prior knowledge about the probability distribution of the randomness associated with the demand may be supported by said automatic detection of the departure times compared with estimated departure times enabling to refine said probability distributions.
  • an updated probability distribution may enable to reduce the number of said DTA based traffic prediction runs, wherein a joint probability distribution of the demand comprising human based estimations of departure time may be refined according to updated probability distribution that are refined according to the history of individual estimates.
  • the weight given to a DTA traffic prediction run is proportional to its weight in the a joint probability distribution of the demand.
  • Prescheduled requests for path controlled trips which include the origin and the destination pairs, are more valuable for DTA based traffic predictions than just a report about estimates of departure times. This is applicable in general and with respect to possible refinement to said individual probability distributions associated with estimated departure times of requests for prescheduled trips.
  • the earlier a prescheduled trip is requested the higher might be its value to a DTA predicted horizon associated with the control on path controlled trips, wherein the farther the time interval in predicted horizon the higher is the dependence of such intervals on the reliability of predicted demand that may be improved by requests for prescheduled trip.
  • More reliable prediction may be obtained by encouraging the use of prescheduled path controlled trips, preferably with an option to potentially respond by the requester to further recommendation by the path control system on departure time somewhat earlier or later than the requested departure time in order to improve travel times.
  • More reliable prediction of demand may enable to shorten trip times at higher reliability providing higher value of travel time saving to the government that may further enable to provide higher said credits.
  • encouraging requests for prescheduled path controlled trips is achieved by providing parking credit for such requests, preferably the level of the credit may depend also on the flexibility of the requester to accept recommended departure time before or after the requested departure time, and preferably within a reasonable maximum predetermined time interval which may differ from one region to another and be dynamic according to time.
  • additional recommended and accepted parking time beyond the requested departure time may be entitled to free of charge parking for this time which is preferably provided in addition to cheaper or free of charge parking time.
  • subsidized parking may be justified by the government due to, and if there is, expected contribution to gain value of travel time (which refers herein after and above to value of saved travel time).
  • Such contribution may be evaluated according to historical computer simulation results, or possibly evaluated at the time of the request and possibly confirmed by simulation according to real time results from the path control. According to such simulation(s) results the value of credit may be determined and the usage of such credit or part of it may potentially be postponed to future parking.
  • subsidizing parking costs may preferably relate to the last time interval in the parking time for parking time which exceeds minimum parking time interval. For example, subsidy provided after 15min of parking time for the last 30min of the parking.
  • encouraging requests for path controlled trips may according to some embodiments include or be based on priority credits associated with assigning available parking places to path control trips.
  • priority in assignment of available parking place may but not be limited to include priority with respect to , for example, closer parking place to a requested destination, lower cost parking place, shorter time to wait for an expected availability of a parking place.
  • priority credit may further be related to levels of priority, wherein more commitment history or requests for path control trips entitles to higher priority credit as well as higher reliability of timely execution of prescheduled trips may further entitle with higher priority credit.
  • assignment of parking places to path controlled trips may but not be limited to include :
  • a. Transmitting by a vehicle a request to a path control system in order to be assigned with a path for a path controlled trip, wherein such a request may be either a request for a non delayed trip (non prescheduled trip) or a request for a prescheduled trip, preferably, according to some embodiment, including in the request a predetermined procedure according to which an agreement of the requester is required to enable assignment of a parking place with a recommended path for a path controlled trip as a destination instead of the requested destination,
  • search is preferably performed under predetermined constraints which may relate to dynamic conditions of demand for parking places and to the availability of parking places, and wherein the search considers the relative location of potential parking place from the requested destination, for example, according to predetermined acceptable distance from requested destination and possibly according some other constraints, subject to availability of a relevant parking place,
  • determining by the path control system e.g., by a paths planning layer
  • a path for requested path controlled trip which may be a tentative delayed entry path with respect to a prescheduled trip.
  • relevant conditions and changes in the availability in parking places preferably repeating according to some embodiments relevant stages in stage "b", wherein relevant conditions to a repetition may but not be limited to include one or more new updates of available parking places in the vicinity of the requested destination, and/or change in the estimated time of arrival of a path controlled trip to its requested destination, and wherein changes in availability of parking places may also affect said potential repetitions which may but not be limited to consider new relevant available parking places which became available after assignment of a parking place to a path controlled trip,
  • an in-vehicle TCU-PS or TCU-PS functionality or HCTU-PS or HCTU-PS functionality activates non authorized parking charge procedure to charge the vehicle owner by a predetermined fine.
  • This for example may be applied in conjunction with a usage condition layer functionality according to the content of a PPMS as described above, wherein the fine is preferably charged in addition to road toll charge with respect to the part of the trip which hasn' t used the assigned path of a path controlled trip to its assigned destination if this was the case.
  • the waiting time which has a traffic loading effect on the road network will be charged by tolling, wherein according to some embodiments waiting time tolerance for which no charge is allowed may be applied as well, and wherein waiting time is determined according to some embodiments by a waiting toll charging process associated with a vehicular charging support unit or a vehicular charging support unit functionality such as for example a TCU-PS or a TCU-PS functionality or an in-vehicle HCTU-PS or an HCTU-PS functionality.
  • a search for available parking places to be assigned to a path controlled trip according to stage "bl" is applied at a time when a trip is close enough to its requested destination while the requested destination is maintained as the destination before said search is performed.
  • Such approach may enable to consider on the one hand the need to minimize changes in a path controlled trip due to changes in availability of parking places and in traffic conditions, wherein continuous changes in the availability of parking places due to dynamic changes may put a non productive computation load of calculations of paths associated with load balancing coordination processes while frequent changes in availability of parking places and in the traffic may occur; while on the other hand still leaving with such approach flexibility in finding efficiently time dependent shortest path to a parking place while the vehicle is still far enough from the requested destination.
  • acceptance of assignment of a parking place to a path controlled trip may be applied automatically as part of a request for a path controlled trip as part of stage "a", preferably enabling the user to determine the maximum accepted distance of a parking place from the requested destination.
  • the tolerance to said maximum requested distance limit is lower as the shortage in parking places is or may be expected to be higher in the vicinity of the requested destination at the time that arrival to the vicinity is expected.
  • assignment of a said tentative parking place in stage "b" which is transmitted to a potential user of a path controlled trip may include a list of options that distinguish among lower and higher cost parking places which may be relevant to a requested destination, wherein according to such embodiments stage 'b", for example, includes determination and transmission of optional parking places to be assigned to a path controlled trip enabling the potential requester to select a preferred choice, wherein potential choices may include rejection of all suggested parking places.
  • a user interface provided with a DNA, through which the request for a path control trip is originated, may be used to select a preferred choice which is transmitted to the path control system.
  • a search for a parking place that may relate to stage 'b" is applied for a plurality of assignments of parking places to a plurality of requests for path controlled trips, which further affects further stages respectively.
  • an optimization process is applied under constraints that may but not be limited to include availability of parking places within a limited vicinity of destinations on which a plurality of path controlled trips are competing.
  • the objective is preferably to fill available parking places under real time related constraints.
  • the assignment of an available parking is performed as part of an optimization process enabling to assign a plurality of parking places to a plurality of requests of path controlled trips and/or active path control trips nearby requested destinations before applying "b.4".
  • this process may require to consider according to some embodiments priority in the assignment of parking places when priority is applied for encouraging prescheduled trips by the highest priority.
  • said optimization process may but not be limited to include a constraint to apply as much as possible non discriminating assignments of parking places to the same considered priority levels, that is, searching for a set, out of possible sets of assignments of available parking places as destinations for path controlled trips, which minimizes potential differences in distances from parking places to requested destinations among the possible assignments.
  • a simple distance shortening criterion may refer to distance difference between said positions whereas a more advanced distance criterion is shortest paths for a pedestrian to walk from a parking place towards a requested destination.
  • random assignments may be applied in case that discrimination among requests should unavoidably be applied, for example, while the demand for one or more parking places is higher than the supply, that is, fairness in the assignments of available parking places, for example for the same considered level of priority, is maximized subject to demand to supply conditions which may limit the level of fairness, for example, demand to supply conditions that may not enable equal level of distance of parking assignments according to the demand to supply of parking places.
  • increased level of priority provision is applied with said possible optimization according to the probability/possibility to make a parking action earlier and preferably for relatively shorter times, enabling with relative provided weights to maximize the efficiency of the operation.
  • assignment of a parking place for a path controlled trip may be applied according to parking assignment criteria which may but not be limited to include priority criteria provided according to relative estimated arrival time of a path controlled trip to its destination and/or according to waiting time for assignment of an available parking place in a vicinity of a destination of a path controlled trip, and/or a according to weighted priority given to waiting time versus estimated arrival time to a destination.
  • parking assignment criteria may but not be limited to include priority criteria provided according to relative estimated arrival time of a path controlled trip to its destination and/or according to waiting time for assignment of an available parking place in a vicinity of a destination of a path controlled trip, and/or a according to weighted priority given to waiting time versus estimated arrival time to a destination.
  • Predictions of demand of trips that is, prediction of time dependent demand which refers to time dependent entries of trips to the network with respect to origin to destination pairs of trips, are progressively becoming more dominant with respect to the effect on travel times on the network along the prediction time horizon of predictive traffic load balancing.
  • vehicles that were on the road network at the beginning of the prediction time horizon became less dominant on the road network while new entries of vehicles to the road network become more dominant.
  • prediction of demand of trips has an effect on the planning of paths for combined current and predicted path controlled trips which planning depends on prior planning of paths for current and predicted path controlled trips, that is, planning of paths is effected by historical, current demand predictions at any cycle of predictive path control.
  • Such planning may become more reliable and more efficient as requests for prescheduled trips dominate requests for path controlled trips, that is, predicted schedule of origin to destination pairs associated with the requests for prescheduled trips may enable predictive path control to be applied with less dependence on zone to zone statistical demand predictions and as a result origin to destination pairs and related departure time resolution of the demand prediction on the network may be increased.
  • prescheduled requests should preferably be encouraged by incentives in order to make the burden associated with such requests to be worthwhile for requesters.
  • incentives in order to make the burden associated with such requests to be worthwhile for requesters.
  • each request for a prescheduled trip contributes to the demand prediction associated with predictive path control, and therefore it may be expected that requests for prescheduled trips will be rewarded, however, this might not be the case in reality and further incentives should preferably be considered as well.
  • a different or a complementary approach may be applied to encourage requests for prescheduled path controlled trips.
  • prescheduled requests and non prescheduled requests are differentiated by providing priority in assignment of parking places to trips that are requested as prescheduled path controlled trips, that is, prescheduled path controlled trips, in comparison to non prescheduled path controlled trips, may be encouraged by priority levels to be assigned with available parking places in the vicinity of the requested destination, wherein priority levels may but not be limited to include assignment in conditions of limited availability of parking places and/or assignment of a closer parking place to the requested destination and/or assignment of a cheaper parking place and/or assignment of a roofed parking place.
  • usage of priority credit may be applied according to preference wherein priority types may be chosen according to options provided through for example a DNA or a DNA application user interface. For example, one requester of path controlled trip may prefer to provide high weight for lower cost parking place, if for example his parking time is expected to be relatively long, whereas another one may prefer a more convenient parking place, for example, if the parking time for example is expected to be relatively short.
  • prescheduled requests for path controlled trips entitle with higher said priority than non prescheduled requests, which may further consider priorities enabling to differentiate among prescheduled requests by entitling priority credit levels to prescheduled trips according to historical committed level to apply such requests and/or according to historical contribution of request to traffic improvement.
  • Such credit may be evaluated by the contribution of a prescheduled trip to travel-time savings on the network.
  • the contribution value is evaluated according to computer simulation which runs two comparable scenarios, wherein one scenario is the real time scenario which includes the executed prescheduled path controlled trip, as part of the predictive control operation, whereas the other scenario is based on off line computer simulation as if a non prescheduled requested path controlled trip was executed.
  • contribution of predictive effect includes also estimated versus real departure time associated with a prescheduled request for a path controlled trip.
  • the estimated departure time which has been taken into account with the traffic prediction associated with the predictive traffic load balancing operation may in case of a mismatch with the executed time of the prescheduled trip reduce the potential contribution of a prescheduled request, at the best case, whereas, at the worst case, to negatively contribute to the traffic load balancing operation. Therefore, the said evaluation of the contribution of a prescheduled trip to the traffic improvement according to computer simulation, in order to entitle the prescheduled trip with credit to get for example priority in assignment of parking places or any other privilege, needs a further consideration in case of a said mismatch.

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Abstract

L'invention concerne des appareils, des systèmes et des procédés appliquant un équilibrage dynamique de charge de trafic guidé par navigation, anonyme et non discriminatoire d'un véhicule sur la base d'une incitation, à l'aide d'un contrôle prédictif de modèle basé sur DTA qui attribue de manière dynamique des ensembles d'itinéraires à des aides à la navigation de voiture, les ensembles d'itinéraires ayant tendance à converger vers des ensembles non discriminatoires établis sous ledit contrôle d'équilibrage de charge de trafic et dans lequel des incitations préservant la confidentialité dans un véhicule permettent une opération d'équilibrage de charge anonyme sans syndrome de Big Brother potentiel. Le système et les procédés permettent d'appliquer un nouveau contrôle de trafic proactif hautement efficace pour un réseau routier urbain ou métropolitain tout en améliorant ou en substituant des solutions commerciales de service de navigation. Le système et les procédés peuvent en outre permettre une protection contre une utilisation anonyme hostile du système, et, en étant pris en charge par des incitations attrayantes, encourager les demandes de confiance pour des voyages préprogrammés, contribuer à l'attribution prédictive de places de stationnement à des voyages contrôlés par itinéraires, ainsi que contribuer à une coordination prédictive de haute qualité de voyages contrôlés.
PCT/IB2017/053995 2016-01-03 2017-07-02 Système et procédés d'intégration pour appliquer un équilibrage de charge de trafic- de ville dynamique prédictif et un contrôle commande de stationnement prédictif qui peut en outre contribuer à une sécurité routière coopérative WO2018142194A1 (fr)

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CA3052234A CA3052234A1 (fr) 2017-02-02 2017-07-02 Systeme et procedes d'integration pour appliquer un equilibrage de charge de trafic- de ville dynamique predictif et un controle commande de stationnement predictif qui peut en ou tre contribuer a une securite routiere cooperative
SG11201907082SA SG11201907082SA (en) 2017-02-02 2017-07-02 Integrative system and methods to apply predictive dynamic city-traffic load balancing and perdictive parking control that may further contribute to cooperative safe driving
US16/482,797 US20200234582A1 (en) 2016-01-03 2017-07-02 Integrative system and methods to apply predictive dynamic city-traffic load balancing and perdictive parking control that may further contribute to cooperative safe driving
AU2017396987A AU2017396987A1 (en) 2017-02-02 2017-07-02 Integrative system and methods to apply predictive dynamic city-traffic load balancing and perdictive parking control that may further contribute to cooperative safe driving
IL268399A IL268399A (en) 2017-02-02 2019-07-31 Integrative system and methods to apply predictive dynamic city-traffic load balancing and perdictive parking control that may further contribute to cooperative safe driving

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US201762453671P 2017-02-02 2017-02-02
US62/453,671 2017-02-02
US201762504115P 2017-05-10 2017-05-10
US62/504,115 2017-05-10

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CN111812974B (zh) * 2020-05-28 2021-07-13 北京理工大学 一种双侧电机驱动履带车辆的综合控制方法
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SG11201907082SA (en) 2019-08-27

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