1. A Study on a Geohash Cell-Based Spatial Analysis Using Individual Vehicle Data for Linear Information
- Author
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Kyu Soo Chong
- Subjects
geohash ,cell ,spatial analysis ,individual vehicle data ,space mean speed ,time mean speed ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Linear spatial data are primarily used in Geographic Information Systems (GISs) to represent spatial data in the form of roads, rivers, railways, and utility lines. Linear spatial data are mostly composed of one-dimensional linear elements, incorporating geometric attributes such as location, direction, and length, as well as the interconnections of these elements. In the case of roads, this information is used to map and analyze traffic data, such as vehicle movements, on the road network. This study aims to propose an area-based spatial analysis method that allows for the flexible application of analysis scales using individual vehicle data, as opposed to node and link generation for linear road networks. The analysis focused on nine expressways, conducting a microscopic analysis of speed-homogeneous sections. The final analysis showed that out of 375 cells, 91 cells in the final 12 division cells did not meet the homogeneity criteria. This discrepancy was ascertained to be due to vehicles decelerating or accelerating when entering or exiting highways at ramps or interchanges, not due to directional speed differences but lane-specific speed variations. The final cells with large speed deviations were found to be influenced by connections to highway on-ramps or off-ramps. In contrast, sections with small speed variations within a cell were influenced by traffic factors such as connection points and traffic volume, which hindered normal driving. As a result, this study validated that traffic information from highways, typically provided as linear data, could be divided into cells based on real-time GPS speed data and presented on an area-based scale. While dividing regions based on fixed intervals does not pinpoint exact speed change points, this study found that reasonable segmentation is possible based on spatial size and speed-homogeneous sections.
- Published
- 2024
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