A traffic count is a count of vehicular or pedestrian traffic, which is conducted along a particular road, path, or intersection. A traffic count is commonly undertaken either automatically (with the installation of a temporary or permanent electronic traffic recording device), or manually by observers who visually count and record traffic on a hand-held electronic device or tally sheet. "FHWA Traffic Monitoring Guide". June 2013. Retrieved March 2015 Traffic counts can be used by local councils to identify which routes are used most, and to either improve that road or provide an alternative if there is an excessive amount of traffic. Also, some Field work involves a traffic count. Traffic counts provide the source data used to calculate the Annual Average Daily Traffic (AADT), which is the common indicator used to represent traffic volume. Traffic counts are useful for comparing two or more roads, and can also be used alongside other methods to find out where the central business district (CBD) of a settlement is located. Traffic counts that include speeds are used in speed limit enforcement efforts, highlighting peak speeding periods to optimise speed camera use and educational efforts.
Recently, off-road technologies have been developed. These devices generally use some sort of transmitted energy such as radar waves or infrared beams to detect vehicles passing over the roadway. These methods are generally employed where vehicle speeds and volume are required without classification which require on-road sensors.Evaluation of Microwave Radar Trailers for Nonintrusive Traffic Measurements." Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board 1917 (2005): 127-40. Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board Online.Middleton, D.R., R.T. Parker, and R.R. Longmire. "Investigation of Vehicle Detector Performance and ATMS Interface.", Texas Transportation Institute 0-4750-2 (2007). Texas Transportation Institute. Other off-road technologies are video image detection systems. A portable digital camera unit can be mounted to a pole and computer vision software is used to analyze traffic pattern including traffic counts.
Traffic count software can now also classify vehicles - recording numbers of cars, trucks, bikes etc as well as total numbers - as well as registering how many travelled that way before. Vehicle Detection: Ten Ways to Count Traffic, Retail Sensing, Retrieved 2023.06.21
In 2004, the American private-sector firm Alta Planning and Design, in partnership with the Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) initiated the National Bicycle and Pedestrian Documentation Program (NBPD) as an effort to promote greater data collection for non-motorized transportation modes, establish a consistent model for data collection, and address the lack of data access and shared research.
In 2013, the US Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) expanded and created a chapter on non-motorized counting for the Traffic Monitoring Guide (TMG) designed to guide planning agencies in the collection of their data.
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