Tracking Traffic - Periodic Table of Videos
Quentin Cooper explores new ideas to reduce traffic chaos. He talks to Dr Alan Stevens from the Transport Research Laboratory and Dr David Brown of Portsmouth University.
Tracking Traffic
In a bank holiday week, traffic can be the main topic of conversation. This week Quentin Cooper investigates how artificial intelligence is being applied to traffic navigation systems for the first time.
The Institute of Industrial Research at Portsmouth University has teamed up with the Traffic Research Laboratory to develop the βCongestion Avoidance Dynamic Routing Engineβ (CADRE).
Instead of a regular sat nav system that gets information about the carβs location from a satellite and tells you where you are on a map, the CADRE uses βfuzzy logicβ to imitate how humans think and make decisions, and constantly takes on new information from fellow users to keep up to date with how traffic is moving.
Heβs joined by Dr Alan Stevens, Chief Research Scientist at the Transport Research Laboratory in Berkshire and Dr David Brown, Head of the Institute of Industrial Research at Portsmouth University who has come up with this new system known as CADRE.
Periodic Table of Videos
There are 118 new videos available on the internet. That number (among many other videos) is significant because itβs the number of elements in the periodic table β 16 more than when Tom Lehrer sang his famous song listing the elements.
The new video collection comes from Professor Martyn Poliakoff who, along with colleagues in the chemistry department at the University of Nottingham have created the latest internet video hit by making short films about each element in the periodic table.
Quentin is joined by Professor Poliakoff and his fellow periodic table video star, Dr Debbie Kays.