Genetically Designed Models for Accurate Imputation of Missing Traffic Counts

Author:

Zhong Ming1,Sharma Satish1,Lingras Pawan2

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Engineering, University of Regina, Regina, Saskatchewan S4S 0A2, Canada

2. Department of Mathematics and Computing Science, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 3C3, Canada

Abstract

Highway agencies traditionally have used simple methods to estimate missing values in their data sets since traffic data programs were established in the 1930s. A literature review shows that current practices for imputing traffic data are varied and intuitive. No research has been conducted to assess imputation accuracy. Typical traditional imputation methods used by highway agencies were identified in a study and used to estimate missing hourly volumes for sample traffic counts from Alberta, Canada, to examine their accuracy. It was found that such models usually resulted in large imputation errors. For example, for imputing missing data of a traffic count located on a commuter site, the 95th percentile errors for the traditional methods are usually between 10% and 20%. Advanced models based on genetic algorithms, a time-delay neural network, and locally weighted regression developed in the study show higher accuracy than traditional imputation models. Most of the 95th percentile errors for genetically designed neural network models tested on the same count are below 6%. For genetically designed regression models, the 95th percentile errors are less than 2%. Study results based on the sample traffic counts from different trip pattern groups and functional classes show that underlying traffic patterns have some influence on imputation accuracy. However, genetically designed regression models still can limit the 95th percentile errors to less than 5% in most cases. It is believed that such accurate imputations should be able to supply satisfactory data for decision making at both planning and operation levels.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference20 articles.

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