Skip to main content

Smart traffic analysis improvements

Transport and traffic analysis nowadays tends to switch between static analysis modelling for large scale studies and microsimulation for finer grain work, with perhaps the mesoscopic model also finding a place for mid-level. Most producers make software tools at all three levels and increasingly package them together. Spanish firm TSS (Transport Simulation Systems) has gone one better with its latest release Aimsum 7, by giving it the capacity to "zoom in" from a larger scale mesoscopic model to a smaller
June 12, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A mesoscopic model of the Aimsun hybrid simulator showing a microscopic pocket of greater detail

Transport and traffic analysis nowadays tends to switch between static analysis modelling for large scale studies and microsimulation for finer grain work, with perhaps the mesoscopic model also finding a place for mid-level. Most producers make software tools at all three levels and increasingly package them together.

Spanish firm TSS (Transport Simulation Systems) has gone one better with its latest release Aimsum 7, by giving it the capacity to "zoom in" from a larger scale mesoscopic model to a smaller area that need microsimulation work, all on the one screen.

It calls the concept the "hybrid simulator" which combines an event-based mesoscopic model with a more detailed time-sliced microsimulation.

This marks a sea change in how traffic models will be conceived, the firm claims, declaring that the method means models will not simply be built once and then discarded. "The hybrid makes it possible for the first time to build demand models on a larger and larger scale using a single all-in-one package,” claimed TSS managing director Jaime Ferrer “with no cumbersome manual interfacing between macroscopic and microscopic models and no need to be updating and revising separate models with independent networks and databases."

154 Aimsun 7 also includes a new network revisions feature, which allows a change made in the base network model to apply automatically to all related future scenarios.

Another new feature is the FZP exporter, which exports simulations to 685 Autodesk 3Ds Max for high–quality 3D presentations. OpenStreetsMap importer allows import of geometry from anywhere via the internet.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Software adds mobile modelling
    July 16, 2012
    US-based BedRock Software has announced the release of a new version of its AggFlow software package that adds the capability to simulate the operation of mobile crushing and screening plant. The company has initially worked with Powerscreen's line of crushing and screening equipment but other manufacturers' data will be added. "As we build our track-mounted data library this will be an important and revolutionary development for the industry," said BedRock president Bryan Lewis. The AggFlow system for fix
  • 10 years of smart excavation with Komatsu
    March 13, 2024

    It is now 10 years since Komatsu introduced its intelligent machine control technology intended to help customers achieve more work in less time and with higher quality.

  • Connected Tech for Construction Continuity
    December 11, 2020
    No one could have predicted the situation we found ourselves in in 2020, with a global pandemic bringing the economy to its knees, projects delayed overnight, rapid restarts, remote management, and challenging labor dynamics.
  • Road recycling
    September 27, 2023
    Easier to operate, thanks to the increasing use of GPS, and greener to run because of biofuels are two of the more innovative technologies being integrated into machine design by major road recycling equipment manufacturers.