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101-0492-00L 3 Credits MSC D-BAUG

Microscopic Modelling and Simulation of Traffic Operations

VVZ CR n/a

Last Updated: 2026-06-03 00:07:25

Abstract

This course introduces microscopic traffic simulation using SUMO. It has two phases: first, students learn to build networks, generate demand, and calibrate models to match real data. Second, they design future scenarios (e.g., infrastructure or demand changes) and implement traffic control using Python and TraCI, presenting solutions to traffic bottlenecks.

Objective

Upon completion of the course, students will be able to: • Explain the theoretical foundations of microscopic traffic models, including car-following, lane-changing, and gap-acceptance dynamics. • Construct a realistic, multimodal road transport network within the SUMO simulation environment. • Model dynamic traffic demand and calibrate simulation parameters to accurately reflect observed, real-world traffic conditions. • Program dynamic traffic control strategies and interface with the simulation programmatically using Python (TraCI). • Evaluate infrastructure modifications and control scenarios by extracting and analyzing quantitative performance indicators, e.g., delay and emissions. • Formulate and present valid engineering proposals based on rigorous simulation methodology and comparative scenario analysis.

Content

The course is divided into two parts across the semester. In the first part of the course, the students will learn microscopic modelling and simulation concepts, including car-following models, lane-changing models, demand generation, and routing logic, etc., with small assignments and the microscopic traffic simulation software SUMO. The assignments facilitate the base scenario development. In the second part, the student will conduct a traffic-engineering project using the base scenario. Alternative scenarios are designed by modifying the network infrastructure, such as road space reallocation, or demand manipulation, such as population growth and modal shift. Interventions using advanced traffic control strategies should then be considered to solve the problem defined. A mid-term proposal will be asked from each group of students. The final deliverables include a presentation and a written technical report.

Resources

Lecture Notes

The lecture notes and additional handouts will be provided before the lectures.

Literature

Additional literature recommendations will be provided at the lectures.

General Information

Language
English
Levels
MSC
Frequency
Yearly recurring

Examination

Type
graded semester performance
The students will be assessed in lectures through work on a group project, a mid-term presentation, a final presentation and a written final report:• Interim oral presentation & report (simulation modelling and problem definition): 5/10• Final oral presentation & report (results and analysis): 5/10

Course Components

Type Title Time & Place Hours
lecture with exercise Microscopic Modelling and Simulation of Traffic Operations
Please bring your own laptop to the course.
No time listed 2 h weekly

Offered In