Search
Menu
Videology Industrial-Grade Cameras - Custom Embedded Cameras LB 2024

Cameras Play Traffic Cop

Facebook X LinkedIn Email
Michael D. Wheeler

TWINSBURG, Ohio -- The next generation of traffic control systems, employing the latest in video imaging and detection, should be operational in a suburb of Akron by midsummer of next year.
Unlike traditional stoplights, this "intelligent transportation system" responds to the changing traffic conditions of an intersection. Sensing backed-up traffic or slower-moving vehicles, a green light stays green longer. Rush hour, once the dread of weary commuters, soon may become manageable as backed-up cars stream through longer green lights.
The system was developed by Twinsburg-based Path Master Inc. It employs a combination of high-tech components and ubiquitous technology. Four industrial black-and-white cameras monitor activity from each corner of an intersection. Images of traffic are conveyed to a high-power processing system.
The system, dubbed VideoTrak, employs different algorithms that determine the types of vehicles, their speeds and a host of other criteria. Pixel changes in the video provide the clues. VideoTrak, manufactured by Peek Traffic in Tallahasee, Fla., is sophisticated enough to discern between vehicle and nonvehicle images -- birds flying by or pedestrians -- while recognizing the different acceleration patterns of buses, cars and dump trucks.
"We have a very high-powered processing system," said Randall Van Scoy, president of Path Master. "It responds to any vehicle. We can change the green time for the number of vehicles [waiting at the intersection]."
Meadowlark Optics - Building system MR 7/23

Published: October 1997
industrialResearch & TechnologyTech Pulse

We use cookies to improve user experience and analyze our website traffic as stated in our Privacy Policy. By using this website, you agree to the use of cookies unless you have disabled them.