LGSYAug 14, 2023

Fourier neural operator for learning solutions to macroscopic traffic flow models: Application to the forward and inverse problems

arXiv:2308.07051v221 citationsh-index: 19
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses traffic flow prediction for urban planning and transportation systems, but it is incremental as it applies an existing neural operator framework to a specific domain with added physics regularization.

The paper tackles learning solutions to macroscopic traffic flow models using a physics-informed Fourier neural operator, achieving superior accuracy in predicting density dynamics for ring-road and urban signalized road scenarios, with extrapolation error growing sub-linearly for complex inputs.

Deep learning methods are emerging as popular computational tools for solving forward and inverse problems in traffic flow. In this paper, we study a neural operator framework for learning solutions to nonlinear hyperbolic partial differential equations with applications in macroscopic traffic flow models. In this framework, an operator is trained to map heterogeneous and sparse traffic input data to the complete macroscopic traffic state in a supervised learning setting. We chose a physics-informed Fourier neural operator ($π$-FNO) as the operator, where an additional physics loss based on a discrete conservation law regularizes the problem during training to improve the shock predictions. We also propose to use training data generated from random piecewise constant input data to systematically capture the shock and rarefied solutions. From experiments using the LWR traffic flow model, we found superior accuracy in predicting the density dynamics of a ring-road network and urban signalized road. We also found that the operator can be trained using simple traffic density dynamics, e.g., consisting of $2-3$ vehicle queues and $1-2$ traffic signal cycles, and it can predict density dynamics for heterogeneous vehicle queue distributions and multiple traffic signal cycles $(\geq 2)$ with an acceptable error. The extrapolation error grew sub-linearly with input complexity for a proper choice of the model architecture and training data. Adding a physics regularizer aided in learning long-term traffic density dynamics, especially for problems with periodic boundary data.

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