Skip to main content

MEDIANETS traffic prediction for Istanbul

The project, called the Multi-Input Deep Learning for Congestion Prediction and Traffic Light Control – TRALICO - is being developed in Hungary in partnership with Istanbul IT and Smart City Technologies and the Nara Institute of Science from Japan.
By David Arminas February 23, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Heavy traffic along Ataturk Boulevard in Istanbul, Turkey, might be reduced if the MEDIANETS project to predict traffic congestion is a success (image © Anna Yordanova/Dreamstime)

MEDIANETS Lab in Hungary says it will develop a traffic congestion forecast and control system that will use artificial intelligence, AI, to control traffic lights.

The project, called Multi-Input Deep Learning for Congestion Prediction and Traffic Light Control – TRALICO - is being developed with the Istanbul IT and Smart City Technologies company in Turkey and the Nara Institute of Science and Technology in Japan.

According to Hungarian media reports, the there is no similar solution being tested in real life situations in any large urban environment in Europe or Japan. A key objective of the project is to run the solution in real life traffic conditions in Istanbul.

The three-year project will be coordinated by Vilmos Simon, head of MEDIANETS Lab which is part of the Department of Networked Systems and Services within the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Informatics at Budapest University of Technology and Economics. BME, as the university is known, is is a public research university located in the capital Budapest.

MEDIANETS - Multimedia Networks and Services Laboratory - specialises in applying artificial intelligence to smart city environments. Research and development activities include machine learning and data analytics for intelligent and automated cities, V2X communication and intelligent transportation systems. MEDIANETS says that it is active in a significant number of European and national research projects.

The Nara Institute of Science and Technology is a Japanese national university located in Kansai Science City located between the cities of Nara, Osaka and Kyoto. It focuses on information science, biological sciences and materials science research.

Meanwhile, the company Istanbul IT and Smart City Technologies was founded in 1986 by the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality to provide maintenance and repair to its vehicle fleets and carry out traffic signalling services for the city. Upon establishment of a research and development department in 1995, it expanded its activities to include intelligent transportation systems, especially traffic signalling.

MEDIANETS and the project were selected for funding under the European Interest Group CONCERT-Japan programme, an international initiative to support and enhance science, technology and innovation, especially in the energy and environment sectors, between the European region and Japan. The primary function is to organise joint European-Japanese research calls for proposals and other research-related activities with the aim to enhance cooperation and exchanges between the two regions. EIG CONCERT-Japan membership is made up of a number of funding agencies and ministries in Europe and Japan and works as an independent body.

Related Content

  • Spreading knowledge on European standards beyond Europe
    October 8, 2015
    Europe is a global leader in road safety. It has an average of 50 traffic fatalities/million population, half that of the equivalent figure for the USA While there is no magical formula for improving road safety, it is possible to observe a positive correlation between the advent of performance-based standards for essential road equipment and the impressive reduction in road fatalities that Europe has seen since 2001, a drop of 50%.
  • All change: get ready to rethink everything
    November 10, 2022
    How can we make our infrastructure ready for new sustainability challenges? What kind of investments are needed? And who will finance them? Tolling association Asecap has some thoughts. Geoff Hadwick reports from Lisbon
  • VIDEO: Pasta-packing drivers should beware of lean-bean cyclists
    August 19, 2016
    Know your limits, especially if that inconsiderate cyclist has got you so enraged that you have jumped out of your car to chase him down the block. You want to teach him a lesson but, like the man in this video, you may end up learning one yourself. You’re too fat. Recognise the chances are slim that you - a car driver who, according to a new study, will be overweight – will catch that svelte bicycle rider. It could end in tragedy with you hitting face-first that urban-grade asphalt, feeling the aggre
  • A virtual virtuous circle
    January 18, 2021
    Virtual sensors will allow a safer driving experience and reduce road maintenance costs. Tactile Mobility’s Eitan Grosbard talks to David Arminas