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Making Trains Run on Time (economist.com)

Plamen Angelov of the University of Lancaster, in Britain, has an idea that he hopes will make train delays rarer. From a report: Often, Dr Angelov observes, the problem is not the inefficiency of operators but the behaviour of passengers -- the "platform-train interface", to use railway parlance. When trains arrive, passengers crowd around the doors waiting to board, restricting the flow of those getting off. When they are about to depart, people often hold doors open, delaying that departure. (A recent study by Japan's Railway Bureau found that passengers attempting to board trains after their scheduled departure times accounted for almost 50% of delays.) Passengers also frequently stand too close to the carriages for safety. Waiting for malefactors to move back behind the yellow safety line on a platform might hold a train up for less than a minute. But over the course of a journey those minutes add up. Even a slight delay is compounded if it causes a train to slip out of its running order and be held at a subsequent station, or be required to follow a slower service.

Dr Angelov thinks that applying artificial intelligence to the problem might help. And that is what he and his team are doing. Using images from the cctv cameras already mounted in carriages and on platforms, their system employs algorithms that have been trained to detect objects such as people, luggage, pushchairs and bicycles. It then measures the movements and positions of these objects relative to areas such as the train doors or the yellow safety line and uses this information to predict problems. The cameras in the carriages detect how busy particular doors are getting as passengers leave their seats and gather next to the exits when the train approaches a station. At the same time, the station cameras monitor the numbers waiting for the train to arrive, whereabouts they are standing along the platform, and how encumbered they are. The two sets of data can then be compared, providing warning of likely areas of congestion. This permits passengers -- particularly those on the platform -- to be directed to doors that will be less busy.

3 of 117 comments (clear)

  1. Oh the irony! by DavidMZ · · Score: 5, Funny

    A researcher *in the UK* is trying to make trains run on time *in Japan*? You just broke my irony-meter.

  2. Re:Position the trains arrival by David_Hart · · Score: 4, Interesting

    so that the internally crowded doors open on the sparsely populated part of the platform. Then you don't have to direct the platform passengers so much.

    Better yet, design train stations with "Entrance and Exit Only" platforms/sides and delay the enter door opening until people are moving out the exit door. In one side, out the other.... You end up with larger train stations, but you would decrease exiting and loading times.

  3. Re:From what I've seen by AHuxley · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How to make trains work like in West Germany, Japan and Switzerland.
    1. Invest in nice new trains.
    2. Hire the best staff on merit.
    3. Look after the stations and trains. Keep the trains and stations clean. Passport controls and police to keep criminals away.
    4. Look after the track. Upgrade the tracks with new technology every generation.
    5. Have a national culture thats likes trains for work and holidays.
    6. Understand what tourism needs. Work to ensure the best parts of a nation can be enjoyed by train. Tell the world about such train travel.
    7. Understand what workers need everyday.


    No AI needed. Just a good way of funding rail and the best staff.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"