Subtitles section Play video
-
Stuck at an intersection, you always watch unfold the fundamental problem of traffic.
-
On green, the first car accelerates, and then the next, and then the next, and then the next, and then you, only to catch the red.
-
Had the cars accelerated simultaneously you would have made it through.
-
Coordination - not cars - is the problem because we are monkey drivers with slow reaction times and short attention spans.
-
Even if we tried getting everyone to press the pedal on 3-2-1-now would be challenging.
-
This dis-coordination limits how many cars can get through an intersection.
-
And when one backs up to the next, that's when city-sized gridlock cascades happen, taking forever to clear.
-
In general, more intersections equals more dis-coordination which equals more traffic.
-
This is the motive behind big highways: no intersections.
-
Splits and merges, yes. Intersections, no.
-
No stopping, no coordination problems, no traffic.
-
Well that's the theory anyway.
-
Intersections outside of a highway will back up onto it.
-
Again, because human reaction times limit how many cars can escape the off-ramp when the light changes.
-
But, even without intersections, there would still be traffic on the highway.
-
Traffic can just appear.
-
Take a one lane highway with happy cars flowing until a chicken crosses the road.
-
The driver who sees it brakes a little.
-
The driver behind him doesn't notice immediately and brakes a little harder than necessary.
-
The driver behind him does the same until someone comes to a complete stop.
-
And, oh look, cars approaching at highway speeds must now stop as well.
-
Though the chicken is long gone, it left a phantom intersection on the highway.
-
This is what's happened when you're stuck in traffic for hours thinking, "There must be a deadly pile-up ahead."
-
And then suddenly, the traffic's over with no wreckage in sight, to your relief if you're a good person and mild annoyance if you aren't.
-
You just pass through a phantom intersection, the cause of which is long gone.
-
And this phantom intersection moves.
-
It's really a traffic snake slithering down the road eating oncoming cars at one end and pooping them out the other.
-
On a ring road, a single car slowing down will start an Ouroboros of traffic that will last forever, even though there's no problem with the road.
-
If the drivers could coordinate to accelerate and separate simultaneously, easy driving would return.
-
But they can't, so traffic eternal.
-
On highways, traffic snakes grow if cars are eaten faster than excreted.
-
And they shrink if excreted faster than eaten, dying when the last car accelerates away before the next car must stop.
-
Now, in multi-lane highways, there needs be no chicken to start gridlock.
-
A driver crossing lanes quickly with cars too close behind is enough to birth the traffic snake that lives for hours and leaves.
-
It's this quick crossing that causes drivers behind to over brake and begin a chain reaction.
-
But we can make traffic snakes less likely by changing the way we drive.
-
Your goal as a driver is to stay the same distance from the car ahead as from the car behind at all times.
-
Tailgating is trouble.
-
Not just because it makes accidents more likely but because you as the tailgater can start a traffic snake if the driver ahead brakes.
-
Always in the middle!
-
This gives you the most time to prevent over-braking but also gives the driver behind you the most time as well.
-
And when stuck in traffic, this rule would get all cars to pull apart the snake faster.
-
That's the simple solution to traffic: getting humans to change their behavior.
-
Perhaps by sharing this video to show how and why traffic happens, why tailgaters are trouble, and how we can work together to make the roads better for all.
-
The End.
-
Except, yeah...wishing upon a star that people are better than they are is a terrible solution. Every time.
-
Instead, what works is a structurally systematized solution which is exactly what self-driving cars are.
-
Self-driving cars can just be programmed to stay in the middle and accelerate simultaneously.
-
They'll just do it.
-
The more self-driving cars at an intersection, the more efficient the intersection gets.
-
A solid lane of self-driving cars vastly increases throughput.
-
Hmm, actually!
-
If you ban humans from the road (which we should totally do anyway), you can get rid of the intersection entirely.
-
After all, a traffic light is just a tool for drivers on one road to communicate with drivers on another, poorly and coarsely.
-
Red equals "Don't go now, we are coming through the intersection."
-
Green equals "good to go."
-
But self-driving cars can talk to each other at the speed of light.
-
With that kind of coordination, no traffic light necessary.
-
Just as with the highway, the best intersection is no intersection.
-
Humans will never drive this precisely.
-
At the intersection, the fundamental problem with traffic that you watch unfold, as well as everything, is people.
-
So the real simple solution to traffic: is no more monkeys driving cars.