Abstract:We present ROSA -- Roundabout Optimized Speed Advisory -- a system that combines multi-agent trajectory prediction with coordinated speed guidance for multimodal, mixed traffic at roundabouts. Using a Transformer-based model, ROSA jointly predicts the future trajectories of vehicles and Vulnerable Road Users (VRUs) at roundabouts. Trained for single-step prediction and deployed autoregressively, it generates deterministic outputs, enabling actionable speed advisories. Incorporating motion dynamics, the model achieves high accuracy (ADE: 1.29m, FDE: 2.99m at a five-second prediction horizon), surpassing prior work. Adding route intention further improves performance (ADE: 1.10m, FDE: 2.36m), demonstrating the value of connected vehicle data. Based on predicted conflicts with VRUs and circulating vehicles, ROSA provides real-time, proactive speed advisories for approaching and entering the roundabout. Despite prediction uncertainty, ROSA significantly improves vehicle efficiency and safety, with positive effects even on perceived safety from a VRU perspective. The source code of this work is available under: github.com/urbanAIthi/ROSA.
Abstract:We address eco-driving at roundabouts in mixed traffic to enhance traffic flow and traffic efficiency in urban areas. The aim is to proactively optimize speed of automated or non-automated connected vehicles (CVs), ensuring both an efficient approach and smooth entry into roundabouts. We incorporate the traffic situation ahead, i.e. preceding vehicles and waiting queues. Further, we develop two approaches: a rule-based and an Reinforcement Learning (RL) based eco-driving system, with both using the approach link and information from conflicting CVs for speed optimization. A fair comparison of rule-based and RL-based approaches is performed to explore RL as a viable alternative to classical optimization. Results show that both approaches outperform the baseline. Improvements significantly increase with growing traffic volumes, leading to best results on average being obtained at high volumes. Near capacity, performance deteriorates, indicating limited applicability at capacity limits. Examining different CV penetration rates, a decline in performance is observed, but with substantial results still being achieved at lower CV rates. RL agents can discover effective policies for speed optimization in dynamic roundabout settings, but they do not offer a substantial advantage over classical approaches, especially at higher traffic volumes or lower CV penetration rates.