Evaluation of the Impact of Queue Trucks with Navigation Alerts Using Connected Vehicle Data

Back of queue crashes on Interstates are a major concern for all state transportation departments. In 2020, Indiana DOT begin deploying queue warning trucks with message boards, flashers and digital alerts that could be transmitted to navigation systems such as Waze. This study reports on the deployment and impact evaluation of digital alerts on motorist’s assistance patrols and 19 Queue trucks in Indiana. The motorist assistance patrol evaluation is provided qualitatively. A novel analysis of queue warning trucks equipped with digital alerts was conducted during the months of May-July in 2021 using connected vehicle data. This new data set reports locations of anonymous hard-braking events from connected vehicles on the Interstate. Hard-braking events were tabulated for when queueing occurred with and without the presence of a queue warning truck. Approximately 370 hours of queueing with queue trucks present and 58 hours of queueing without queue trucks present were evaluated. Hard-braking events were found to decrease approximately 80% when queue warning trucks were used to alert motorists of impending queues.


Introduction
Identifying opportunities for continuous improvement in roadway safety is a priority for all transportation agencies. Crash incidents on interstates, maintenance activities or ongoing work zone activities often result in slow traffic and/or forming queues. The boundary between free-flow conditions and queue traffic results in rapid speed reductions on the interstate that can increase crash risk for inattentive drivers. A study conducted in 2014 has shown that the congested crash rates at the back of the queue on all Indiana Interstates were found to be 24 times greater than the uncongested crash rate [3]. Several states are exploring or deploying queue warning trucks to provide visual alerts to drivers approaching stopped traffic on the interstate. One such example of the deployed queue truck is shown in Figure 1. Queue trucks are deployed ahead of the work zone on Indiana Interstates. Message board signs and flashers visually alert motorists of the slow-moving traffic ahead. They are also equipped with digital alerts that could be transmitted to navigation systems. In-vehicle navigation alerts also provide an additional opportunity to improve communication to drivers of modern vehicles.

Study Objective
The use of queue trucks and in-vehicle navigation alerts can alert drivers and draw their attention as they approach slow-moving traffic due to various reasons such as crash incidents or ongoing work zone activity. Since both queue trucks and in-vehicle navigation alerts are emerging technologies, there are no best practices for their use or methods for evaluating their impact. The objective of this paper is to introduce the concept of queue trucks and navigation alerts and propose a methodology for evaluating their impact.

Literature Review
In the United States alone, more than 115,000 highway work zone crashes were estimated by the National Work Zone Safety Information Clearinghouse in 2019 [4], of which 762 were fatal crashes involving 842 fatalities. 24% of these work zone fatal crashes involved a rear-end collision and 31% crashes had speeding as a factor [5]. Other studies have also shown that crash rates on interstate sections with construction activity are significantly higher than those in non-work zone conditions [4] [5]. Furthermore, a study conducted in 2014 has shown that the congested crash rates at the back of the queue on all Indiana interstates were found to be 24 times greater than the uncongested crash rate [3]. Sudden speed reductions and queuing as a result of a primary crash incident, maintenance activity, or a construction work zone create hazardous conditions and a high risk for the occurrence of secondary crashes [6] [7] [8] [9]. The study conducted by Yang, Hong et al. has also shown that an additional minute increase in the incident duration will increase the likelihood of secondary crash occurrence by 1.2% [10]. Reducing these incidents, particularly the back of queue secondary crashes, continues to be an important focus for transportation agencies and other stakeholders across the country for the safety of motorists as well as construction workers.
Traditionally, fixed signs are used for communicating the presence of work zones or maintenance activities on highways. Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) also provides guidelines on the use of temporary traffic control zone signs [11]. In the case of emergency response, signs are often incorporated onto the vehicle [12] [13] [14] [15]. The impact of these signs, flashes, message boards or digital alerts from trucks has not yet been evaluated extensively. Deployment strategies of such queue trucks are also evolving.
Technologies introduced for improving road safety are often evaluated using crash rates [16] [17] [18]. But crashes are often reported with a time lag and underreported due to a variety of reasons [19] [20] [21], including the unwillingness of involved drivers to report a crash [22]. A study conducted on 23 construction work zones that covered approximately 150 centerline miles of Indiana interstate roadway in the summer of 2019, found that there was approximately 1 crash for every 147 hard-braking events in and around a construction site with an R 2 value of 0.85 [23]. Thus, the new commercially available hard-braking data sources provide an opportunity for agencies to follow up with mitigation measures addressing emerging problems much quicker than typical practices that rely on 3 -5 years of crash data [24]. This study presents a methodology using these hard-braking events as a surrogate for crash incidents for impact evaluation of queue warning trucks and digital alerts. found an overall market penetration of 1.1% with a range of 0.2% to 2.0% depending on the time of day [27]. Approximately 4.7% of the vehicles on Indiana Interstates in 2020 were fully connected to a connected vehicle provider [28].
The number of connected vehicles on the road will continue to increase. Almost 100% of vehicles travelling on interstates have at least one cell phone in the vehicle. Although there is no published data, it is reasonable to assume somewhere around 20% of vehicles on roads are running some type of in-vehicle navigation applications such as Waze, Apple, Google, Trimble, etc. [29]. This suggests a large number of vehicles driving on roadways are using advanced communication channels such as cell phones. It provides an opportunity to alert all these drivers of upcoming hazards, slow-moving or stopped traffic using the navigation alerts in combination with the visual alerts from the queue trucks. This study introduces these digital alerts and proposes a methodology for evaluating them, in combination with a queue warning truck.

Connected Vehicle Trajectory Data
Commercially available anonymized trajectory data provides a unique waypoint with a reporting interval of 3 to 5 seconds. Each waypoint is associated with information of GPS location, measured on vehicle speed, heading, timestamp and an anonymous trajectory identification number. By linking individual waypoints by their trajectory identification number, a vehicle's trajectory can be obtained.
Each waypoint is also associated with interstate reference points at every 0.1 miles to create the traffic speed heatmaps. One month of connected vehicle data in Indiana alone provides over 10 billion records on average.

Connected Vehicle Hard-Braking Events Data
The hard-braking event data used in this study was made commercially available by data providers that worked directly with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs). The enhanced probe data from these connected passenger vehicles included an anonymized unique identifier with the timestamp, geolocation, speed, heading and hard-braking/acceleration as attributes. The provider of this data

Alerts to Navigation Applications
Queue warning trucks equipped with digital alerts send navigation alerts to drivers. Figure 3 illustrates the high-level network structure of data transfer between the queue truck on-site and communication delivery to approaching motorists via navigation application alerts. Alerts are sent from the queue trucks or any other emergency vehicle such as Hoosier Helpers to the cloud of a digital alert provider via onboard telematics. Once the alerts are transferred to the cloud, digital alerts are sent via navigations apps to motorists in the vicinity or approaching the truck. The data from the cloud is also analyzed to provide feedback to queue trucks on deployment location and strategies.

Navigation Alert Data from Transponders
Transponders are installed on the queue warning trucks (Figure 4(a)) and Hoosier Helpers (Figure 4(b)). It can be installed on any emergency response or driver's assistance vehicle. Any vehicle equipped with the onboard transponder device has the capability of sending alerts to the digital alert provider and then to the navigation apps such as Waze. The transponder is wired in such a way that the alerts are shown on navigation apps only when the vehicle turns on its strobe lights. Data from transponders deployed on 19 queue trucks in Indiana was used for analysis during this study.

Navigation Alert Data from Telematics Data
Alerts generated from the vehicles, such as those as shown in Figure 4, can be generated using either agency maintained fleet telematics, or navigation alert vendor hardware. Alerts can be triggered in one of two conditions: 1) If the strobe lights are active; 2) Or if the vehicle is stationary or moving with a speed less than 2 miles per hour on Interstate. Currently, telematics data from 15 Indiana DOT Hoosier Helper trucks are used to send digital alerts using agency managed telematics and private sector operated queue trucks transmit alerts using navigation alert vendor supplied hardware.
A digital navigation alert example is shown in Figure 5. Callout i points to the location of Hoosier Helper responding to a crash scene on digital alert providers dashboard ( Figure 5(a)), Waze navigation application ( Figure 5(b)) and camera image ( Figure 5(c)). Callout c points to the crash incident that the response vehicle is serving to.

Case Study Showing Impact of Queue Truck with Navigation Alerts
A case study is presented using the traffic speed heatmap showing the impact of queue warning trucks with navigation alerts. This queue caused 29 hard-braking events (callout h1) at the back of the queue.
This incident was compared with similar traffic conditions on the previous day.

Longitudinal Analysis of Queue Warning Truck Impact
This study inspected traffic speed profiles to look for queuing conditions for the months of May-July in 2021. Multiple queuing incidents on Indiana I-65 with and without the presence of queue warning trucks and navigation alerts were identified.  Table 1 summarizes the hard-braking events during 58 hours of observed queuing with no queue trucks. 620 hard-braking events occurred in the 4195 trajectories approaching the queue i.e., 14.8% of the motorists experienced hard braking while approaching the queue.  Table 2 summarizes the hard-braking events for 370 hours of queues when queue warning trucks were deployed with digital alerts. The trucks were deployed for ongoing work zone activity at MM 145 on I-65 during the evening hours. Only 2.6% of the trajectories experienced hard braking out of 6240 trajectories.
Comparing these two tables, hard-braking events were found to decrease approximately 80% when queue warning trucks with digital alerts were used to alert motorists of impending queues.

Conclusions
Several states are exploring or deploying the queue warning trucks to alert motorists approaching stopped or slow-moving traffic and provide them with in-vehicle navigation alerts. The final form of connected vehicles will likely change considerably over the next few years as market forces determine what type of information is directly integrated into the vehicle and what information is integrated via cell phones. In-vehicle notification will be complementing roadside signs moving forward. A methodology was described using connected vehicle hard-braking events for evaluating the impact of these queue trucks. Navigation alerts can be sent by using agency maintained fleet telematics, or navigation alert vendor hardware. A case study on I-65 showed the reduction of hard-braking events from 29 to 3 while using the queue warning truck with digital alerts. This paper reports on the novel use of connected vehicle data to assess the impact of queue warning trucks. A longitudinal comparison of queueing for 370 hours with the presence of trucks and 58 hours without trucks was conducted during the months of May-July in 2021. Hard-braking events were found to decrease approximately 80% when queue warning trucks were used to alert motorists of impending queues. Encouraging results support the deployment of queue trucks and integration of digital alerts for reducing the risks of secondary crashes on Interstates.
alert vendor and digital alerts data used during this study was provided by HAAS Alert. The contents of this study reflect the views of the authors, who are responsible for the facts and the accuracy of the data presented herein and do not necessarily reflect the official views or policies of the sponsoring organizations. These contents do not constitute a standard, specification, or regulation.