| 9th February - Nokia and UC Berkeley
researchers today tested technology that could soon transform the way drivers
navigate through congested highways and obtain information about road conditions.
One hundred cars equipped with the GPS-enabled Nokia N95, and driven by students
from the University of California, traveled a 10-mile stretch of highway near
San Francisco to show how real-time traffic information can be collected from
the GPS feed, while preserving the privacy of the devices' owners. The
experiment was carried out to test the traffic data collection and aggregation
system, while studying the trade-offs between data accuracy, personal privacy,
and data collection costs. The software aggregating the GPS feeds immediately
disassociates that data from an individual device and combines it with the general
stream of traffic data. To protect privacy, all data is anonymous and aggregated,
and protected by banking-grade encryption During the experiment, special
software on the mobile devices periodically sent anonymous speed and location
readings from the integrated GPS to servers. The feeds were then combined to create
a real-time picture of traffic speeds and projected travel times. "Mobile
device users control the service. If an individual does not want their device
to transmit position data they turn off the feed from their GPS," stated
Quinn Jacobson, Research Leader at Nokia Research Center, Palo Alto. "Nokia
is very excited at the potential for this system to revolutionize travel planning,
carrying on from the Nokia Maps navigation service available today on certain
Nokia devices," continued Jacobson. "Integration of traffic information
with functions such as calendar and online timetables may one day mean the mobile
device can act as personal travel planner." "There are mobile
device-based systems out there that can collect data in a variety of ways, such
as measuring signal strength from towers and triangulating position, but to our
knowledge, this is the first demonstration of this scale using GPS-enabled mobile
devices to provide traffic related data such as travel times, and with a deliberate
focus on critical deployment factors like bandwidth costs and personal privacy
issues," said Director Thomas West, director, UC Berkeley's California Center
for Innovative Transportation. The researchers believe that fewer than
5% of drivers need to contribute location data for the system to be effective
on any particular highway. For state transportation agencies such as The
California Department of Transport (Caltrans), tapping into the vast network of
mobile phones on the road could one day remove the need to invest in expensive
infrastructure to obtain traffic information as well as greatly expanding the
coverage of such services. In the USA alone congestion causes 4.2 billion
hours extra travel every year and the purchase of extra 2.9 billion gallons of
fuel for a congestion cost of USD 78 billion(1). With the number of vehicles on
the road increasing rapidly around the world a cost-effective method of travel
planning could help drivers make smarter decisions about which routes to take,
the researchers say. The project brings together research teams from
the Nokia Research Center (NRC) in Palo Alto and from UC Berkeley, interacting
through UC Berkeley's California Center for Innovative Transportation (CCIT).
These teams are developing the algorithms, software and architecture of this GPS-based
traffic monitoring system. The project is supported by a USD 186,000
grant from Caltrans. Additional support comes from the National Science Foundation,
Nokia, Tekes, Rutgers University's WINLAB, the University of California Transportation
Center and the Volvo Center of Excellence for Future Urban Transport at UC Berkeley's
Institute of Transportation Studies. Back
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