Abstract:Adaptive traffic signal control (TSC) has demonstrated strong effectiveness in managing dynamic traffic flows. However, conventional methods often struggle when unforeseen traffic incidents occur (e.g., accidents and road maintenance), which typically require labor-intensive and inefficient manual interventions by traffic police officers. Large Language Models (LLMs) appear to be a promising solution thanks to their remarkable reasoning and generalization capabilities. Nevertheless, existing works often propose to replace existing TSC systems with LLM-based systems, which can be (i) unreliable due to the inherent hallucinations of LLMs and (ii) costly due to the need for system replacement. To address the issues of existing works, we propose a hierarchical framework that augments existing TSC systems with LLMs, whereby a virtual traffic police agent at the upper level dynamically fine-tunes selected parameters of signal controllers at the lower level in response to real-time traffic incidents. To enhance domain-specific reliability in response to unforeseen traffic incidents, we devise a self-refined traffic language retrieval system (TLRS), whereby retrieval-augmented generation is employed to draw knowledge from a tailored traffic language database that encompasses traffic conditions and controller operation principles. Moreover, we devise an LLM-based verifier to update the TLRS continuously over the reasoning process. Our results show that LLMs can serve as trustworthy virtual traffic police officers that can adapt conventional TSC methods to unforeseen traffic incidents with significantly improved operational efficiency and reliability.
Abstract:This paper proposes a privacy-preserving data fusion method for traffic state estimation (TSE). Unlike existing works that assume all data sources to be accessible by a single trusted party, we explicitly address data privacy concerns that arise in the collaboration and data sharing between multiple data owners, such as municipal authorities (MAs) and mobility providers (MPs). To this end, we propose a novel vertical federated learning (FL) approach, FedTSE, that enables multiple data owners to collaboratively train and apply a TSE model without having to exchange their private data. To enhance the applicability of the proposed FedTSE in common TSE scenarios with limited availability of ground-truth data, we further propose a privacy-preserving physics-informed FL approach, i.e., FedTSE-PI, that integrates traffic models into FL. Real-world data validation shows that the proposed methods can protect privacy while yielding similar accuracy to the oracle method without privacy considerations.