SafeLight: A Reinforcement Learning Method Toward Collision-Free Traffic Signal Control
Abstract
Traffic signal control is safety-critical for our daily life. Roughly one-quarter of road accidents in the U.S. happen at intersections due to problematic signal timing, urging the development of safety-oriented intersection control. However, existing studies on adaptive traffic signal control using reinforcement learning technologies have focused mainly on minimizing traffic delay but neglecting the potential exposure to unsafe conditions. We, for the first time, incorporate road safety standards as enforcement to ensure the safety of existing reinforcement learning methods, aiming toward operating intersections with zero collisions. We have proposed a safety-enhanced residual reinforcement learning method (SafeLight) and employed multiple optimization techniques, such as multi-objective loss function and reward shaping for better knowledge integration. Extensive experiments are conducted using both synthetic and real-world benchmark datasets. Results show that our method can significantly reduce collisions while increasing traffic mobility.
Cite
Text
Du et al. "SafeLight: A Reinforcement Learning Method Toward Collision-Free Traffic Signal Control." AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2023. doi:10.1609/AAAI.V37I12.26729Markdown
[Du et al. "SafeLight: A Reinforcement Learning Method Toward Collision-Free Traffic Signal Control." AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2023.](https://mlanthology.org/aaai/2023/du2023aaai-safelight/) doi:10.1609/AAAI.V37I12.26729BibTeX
@inproceedings{du2023aaai-safelight,
title = {{SafeLight: A Reinforcement Learning Method Toward Collision-Free Traffic Signal Control}},
author = {Du, Wenlu and Ye, Junyi and Gu, Jingyi and Li, Jing and Wei, Hua and Wang, Guiling},
booktitle = {AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence},
year = {2023},
pages = {14801-14810},
doi = {10.1609/AAAI.V37I12.26729},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/aaai/2023/du2023aaai-safelight/}
}