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Chaos and Your Everyday Traffic Jam

An anonymous reader writes "What causes these mysterious traffic jams that continually appear throughout the day for no reason whatsoever? Is it simply the fact that most people just don't have a clue how to drive? That's very possible, and in reality there are so many variables involved in something like a traffic jam. But is it possible that the entire traffic jam could be both the continuing and end result of a chain reaction set in motion by a single driver who was in too much of a hurry?"

19 of 477 comments (clear)

  1. Passion of Traffic by P(0)(!P(k)+P(k+1)) · · Score: 5, Funny

    From TFA:

    So the next time you find yourself stuck in bumper to bumper traffic, it's very possible that the jackass that caused it is already at home watching the latest episode of American Idol[...].

    I like the idea of a single blameworthy agent to bear the brunt of my hideous imprecations: a Christ of traffic, if you will; except I'm the Romans, and it's Mel Gibson's Passion all over again.

  2. Site jammed up by johnw · · Score: 4, Funny

    Only three comments and already the site seems to have been totally jammed up by a single Slashdot article in too much of a hurry.

  3. I know, I know!! by quokkapox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "What causes these mysterious traffic jams that continually appear throughout the day for no reason whatsoever?

    Too many cars?

    --
    it's a blue bright blue Saturday hey hey
  4. Field of Study by WaXHeLL · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's actually a field of study for this: Traffic Analysis. Of course, this is not to be confused with all of the material out there relating to internet/network/packet analysis.

    This mainly deals with optimizing freeways and the like, based on people's behavior in traffic, and the ripple affects.

    --
    The troll with karma.
  5. Roads and CSMA/CD by rar42 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I'm inclined to compare roads to shared medium Ethernet. As the traffic builds up you get more 'collisions' and both systems have collision detection built-in.

    With Ethernet, as the 'traffic' builds to about 40% of the theoretical capacity, collisions become the norm and the re-tries start to overwhealm the system and it locks. With roadways, as the traffic builds to a certain limit, then awareness of potential collisions magnifies in the drivers, so reactions to situations increases and the road stalls. This is why variable speed limits work, because the road and drivers can cope with more vehicles if there is a lower maximum speed.

    --
    rgds,
    Richard Rothwell
    "All that is required for evil to triumph is that the good keep silent"
    1. Re:Roads and CSMA/CD by DynaSoar · · Score: 5, Interesting

      rar42 (626382) sez:
      > I'm inclined to compare roads to shared medium Ethernet. As the
      > traffic builds up you get more 'collisions' and both systems
      > have collision detection built-in. With Ethernet, as the 'traffic'
      > builds to about 40% of the theoretical capacity, collisions
      > become the norm

      You're pretty much completely wrong, and the last quoted line sums up why.
      Collisions are not the norm in traffic jams.

      Traffic jams happen due to the ripple effect from cumulative reaction time
      delays in response to changes in traffic. The effect accumulates until there
      is so much loss of speed that people drive closer together. Then when they
      have to react, they react more abruptly, and that causes yet a stronger ripple
      effect.

      Packets collide, cars don't. Cars change speed, packets don't.
      Well, OK, sometimes cars do collide. But it's not the collision itself that
      causes the traffic jam, it's the bottleneck in the right of way and/or the
      rubberneckers.

      If people could and would simply maintain the 2 second following distance
      no matter what speed, when the fewer traffic jams did occur, they would resolve
      themselves much more quickly. But just try telling the person 500 cars back to
      just sit still for 10 minutes. They'd probably want to punch you, and they'll
      still insist on driving stopgostopgostogostopgo despite the fact that doing so
      means they'll be doing it for several times longer than just waiting.

      90% of drivers think they're better than average.
      90% of drivers are below average drivers.
      So I give free driving lessons.
      Like braking suddenly for tailgaters.

      --
      "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
  6. On a very busy road... by Alioth · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I fly light planes. Major roads, when VFR, are very good landmarks.

    Quite often when it is very busy, you can see a standing wave in the traffic - there's an area where all the cars are stopped - but there is NO obstruction at all. The cars are filling the 'standing wave' from the back as quickly as cars at the front are leaving it - so it becomes self-sustaining.

    When the road is full to capacity, moving at 70 mph, all it takes is one person to jab their brakes ... then the drivers behind (probably following far too close) brake a bit harder, and the drivers behind them brake a bit harder still. The adjacent lanes, in seeing one lane suddenly slow go 'whoa', and someone also brakes in that lane. Pretty soon, just from one person braking a little bit - the braking has propagated down the road with greater and greater severity until one of two things happens: usually, the traffic comes to a standstill, and you get a self-sustaining standing wave of stopped traffic until the amount of traffic on the road reduces to the extent there are fewer cars joining the wave than are leaving. This can take HOURS, especially on the M6 in England. The second thing that may happen in this cascading braking severity is that someone runs into the back of the other. Then chaos ensues for most of the day.

    The other problem is lorries (large trucks) overtaking lorries with a speed differential of 0.5 mph. It takes them several minutes to get past because they are both speed limited within 0.5 mph of each other, meaning the inside two lanes are 56mph, and the outside lane is 70mph+. When a frustrated driver pulls out into the outside lane after being stuck behind a lorry for "too long", they cause one of the outside lane drivers to brake down to 56 mph quite suddenly. This can easily get the 'braking cascade' started, and before you know it - you have a standing wave traffic jam with no actual obstruction (other than the standing wave itself).

    Usually then what happens, is the opposite direction traffic, seeing the stoppage rubber necks for the possible accident. An inattentive driver looking at the other side of the road finally looks back in front and realises he's about to ram a truck in the rear and slams on the brakes. The driver behind him following far to closely has to brake even harder - and there's either a shunt or if they are lucky, ANOTHER standing wave traffic jam starts on this side of the road too.

    It's fascinating to watch from the air. Frustrating to be in when driving.

    1. Re:On a very busy road... by RotateLeftByte · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Some of the points are very well made.
      Just ask anyone who has been a driver at the tail end of an Army Convoy. They are either flat out of at a dead stop. The concertina effect magnifies as the number of vehicles increases. This is why smaller convoys are better.

      I was once in a lecture where this was explained. It all went down to the following
        Chaos Theory
        Queuing Theory
      and most impostantly,
        A single thing which cause on vehicle to slow down without due cause. The nthe vehicle behind has to slow and Bingo! it all starts.
      Once to get beyond a certain number of vehicles the elasticity in the queue gets to a critical size and you get the unexplained traffic jams.

      Some places try to minimise these jams by artificially reducing speed limits to reduce the elasticity but IMHO, these have limited effect.
      IMHO, the ONLY way to stop these elastic jams is to connect the vehicles together. I once saw a demo of such a thing. Oh, sorry, it is called a train...:)
      Seriously, BMW demoed a device many years ago that would allow you to get much closer to the vehicle in front but in a safe manner. I think that it is only a metter of time before there is a viable system to connect vehicles together electronically in such a way that they can be physically very close to each other in a safe manner. The driver would join such a convoy and then switch on an autopilot system and sit back and relax.

      --
      I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
    2. Re:On a very busy road... by Alioth · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh, I do that. The thing that annoys me is when I see trouble ahead and start to slow, as soon as the tiniest gap opens, someone in an adjacent lane leaps in. It's so frustrating. Many of the problems are caused by poor 'me first' road discipline, for example, when approaching a constriction, so many drivers go right to the end and try and force their way in - and it's not helped by people not letting adjacent lanes merge in good time before the obstruction.

      The art of proper merging should be something taught to drivers and tested on the driving test.

    3. Re:On a very busy road... by MaelstromX · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That article is a must-read. Also interesting is this Java traffic simulator which demonstrates all the ways that traffic jams can form.

    4. Re:On a very busy road... by Skater · · Score: 4, Informative

      Uh, merging in at the end is exactly what they SHOULD be doing. Think of it as a "zipper" that closes at the end of the lane. It works out better for people in both lanes. The people that merge in early actually make the continuing lane slower for everyone.

  7. Re:Where I live ... by Patrik_AKA_RedX · · Score: 5, Funny
    I've nearly forgotten what traffic jams are like.
    It's like waiting in front of a traffic light. Except there are no lights, especialy no green ones. And a lot of people can't make up their mind about which direction they'll take after the lights and switch lanes accordenly.
    It's not the waiting that's so troublesome about a traffic jam, nor is the fact your boss will be very angry about you being 3 days late for work. It's the seeing other people's weird-car-habbits that's truely painful.

    Luckly there are a few ways to make it less painful:
    1) Bring your wife. Get her head in your lap. Remember to "read" a map or newspaper at the proper time. Nobody wants to see your face at that particular moment.
    2) Bring your kids! Yelling and screaming is very good to get oxygen in your system and the kicking might actually get your lower back pain to disappear. People tend to pay a lot for such a massage.
    3) Portable TV! Makes your waiting in the jam a painless affair. Might, ofcourse, make you the cause of the next traffic jam.
    4) Laptops! Pass the network cable from car to car and have a mobile LAN-party!
    5) Cellphone: Ask the number of other people in the jam and have conversations. Now you can ask what the h*ll he was thinking and discuss why he should stay the f*ck on his lane.
    6) music intruments! They call it jammin' right?
    7) Mexican wave ... with sound!
    8) strip poker with car parts! A El Cheapo car with the hood of a ferrari, now wouldn't that rock?
    9) Bring candy and beer! Instant party! Would suck if you're picked to be the sober driver. Thought bringing drunk friends home was bad? Think how bringing 12,000 drunk strangers home would be like.
    10) Disassemble your car, climb over the fence, down to the street below with as many part as you can carry. repeat as necessary. reassemble the car. Takes some time, but you'll be home quicker anyway.
  8. It's too obvious by arikb · · Score: 5, Funny

    For the longest time a friend and I have theorized about the reasons for those traffic jams. We've reached the inescapable conclusion that they are the results of a conspiracy.

    Don't go your heads a-shaking now. It's really obvious. The oil companies make a bundle of those traffic jams. Every day just before rush hour a small fleet of inconspicuous unmarked vehicles, driven by selected elderly, are leashed upon the major freeways. They are trained to drive in such a pattern that makes it impossible for other cars to bypass them. Soon enough the traffic jam forms. Millions of cars are burning precious fuel while standing still, and the oil barons go cha-ching.

    Denying it doesn't make it go away.

    -- Arik

  9. Old, old, incredibly old news by deblau · · Score: 5, Interesting

    See this Science Hobbyist article from January 1998. It's long and detailed, and suggests practical steps individual drivers can take for breaking up (or causing!) traffic jams. Yes, dear readers, this is a nine-year-old dupe.

    --
    This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
  10. Re:slow ass drivers by beelsebob · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I'd agree with you partially, slow drivers getting in the way is a major cause here. But I'd suggest that it's usually actually the person in the expensive powerful car being impatient that causes the major tail backs.

    Here in Britain, I drive a small Skoda, it doesn't go too fast, but it's certainly no snail (it can do well over 100 if I really wanted to). I tend to drive down motorways at 75 or 80 mph (very naughty, I know, the speed limit is 70). The thing that I observe most often is that if I pull out to overtake some slower moving traffic (a lorry, or someone doing 70), there's usually some ass hole in a beemer, a merc or an audi comes roaring up behind me at 100mph, slams on the breaks because he realises a bit too late that there's someone driving at a sane speed, and then proceeds to tail you 5m from your bumper until you deign to move over and let the selfish twat past.

  11. Re:It's both! by zero_offset · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The two-second gap is typically recommended for 70 MPH speeds. It is dramatically smaller for lower speeds. It is also completely unrealistic at any speed. A two-second gap at 70 MPH is about 315 feet, or about 24 car lengths. At 70 MPH the assumption is that the average person requires about 2/5th of a second to react, which equates to just under 70 feet. That leaves 247 feet for braking. The NHSTA pegs the average 70 MPH braking distance for modern cars around 170 feet. I personally suspect it's much lower these days, and with panic braking plus ABS it would be far, far lower. But give them the benefit of the doubt (though god only knows why) and call it 160 feet. That leaves you 87 feet, so the two-second gap is overly conservative by a factor of about 25%.

    BUT -- and here is where it gets stupid for real-world conditions -- that braking scenario assumes that you must stop within that two-second gap. Think about this: the only way that would matter is if there is an immobile object two seconds ahead of you. You're driving along, then mysteriously, 315 feet in front of you, something is stopped dead. What are the actual chances of this happening to any responsible, alert driver doing 70 MPH? Very small. In fact what will happen is that the car ahead begins to slow, and you burn your 0.4 second reaction time (which I also think is unrealistically high), then you begin to slow in concert with the car ahead. It is obviously impossible to derive any specific numbers for the rates at which this happens as they'll be random, but it certainly doesn't equate to a 70MPH-to-zero panic stop in a limited space.

    In any case, his figure of 120 cars per minute is probably a lot closer to reality than anything provided for by the 2-second rule, which is a 24-car-length gap -- have you ever seen a busy highway where anyone was maintaining a 24-car-length gap? Would it even be possible to actually estimate and maintain this at 70 MPH? That's about 1/16th of a mile ... 16 cars per mile and the highway would look positively empty.

    --

    Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

  12. Re:It's both! by aderuwe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Different issue.

    The SUV driver should have at least touched the break to clue in those behind. That he didn't is deserving of having his driver's license taken away.
    This has nothing to do with car separation. It just so happens that an idiotic separation of hundreds of feet would have helped in this case.

    People who drive feeling as though they are _moving through traffic_ are what causes problems.
    You should drive _with_ traffic, be a _part of traffic_. There are no individuals in traffic - we are all one whole. The Traffic.
    Drive with this in mind, and you'll increase your driving skill by orders of magnitude.

    (Of course none of this _really_ matters even if it is the truth, because of all the other individuals considering themselves the most important pricks in traffic / the universe...)

    (And yes, this means that I break speed limits whenever moving with traffic requires it. This is a natural conclusion.)

    Cheers.

  13. Specific to Albany, NY area by Phreakiture · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In our area, there is a twice-daily traffic jam that has been understood for years, but fixing the road to take away the problem would be ungodly expensive.

    There is, actually, nothing technically wrong with the road. The road in question is I-87 (the Northway), and the pinch point is where it crosses the Mohawk river. The Twin Bridges have a slightly narrower shoulder than the highway leading up to them in either direction, but the shoulder, on both sides of each bridge, is still every bit as wide as any of the three lanes going in either direction.

    Compounding the problem is that the bridges are (hope this is the right term) truss bridges. There are two convex bowed beams that go over each side of each bridge, and a construct of triangular trusses between them. These are the reason why a change would be ungodly expensive, because you would have to rebuild the bridges.

    Anyway, people come to the bridges and slow down because they perceive that the road has gotten narrower, while failing to perceive that this fact is irrelevant. This slowing down leads to the accordion effect that was described in TFA, where successive cars have to apply more and more braking in order not to hit the car in front of them. By the time you are a mile north of the bridge in the mornings (south in evenings), traffic is basically stopped.

    The construct that causes all of this trouble can be seen here (along with some Google wierdness in the construction of the image).

    --
    www.wavefront-av.com
    1. Re:Specific to Albany, NY area by malfunct · · Score: 4, Interesting

      A better solution is to strictly enforce following distance laws. A study was done on traffic patterns in Seattle area to see how they could be improved and found that the single most important thing to fix the issue was to give proper following distance between cars. This counteracts the pipeline bubbles (yes almost the same thing as a bubble in your processor pipeline) by giving room to absorb sudden stops and also solves some of the merging issues that we see. Its more likely than not that even though the one jackass that was spoken about in the summary triggered the slowdown the real cause was everyone crowding the person in front of them so that the sudden stop was propogated in perpetuity instead of being absorbed and spread across the whole flow.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"