Monday, September 21, 2020

HOW ODOT CALCULATES TRAVEL TIMES APPEARING ON NEWBERG-DUNDEE BYPASS ELECTRONIC READERBOARDS


HOW ODOT CALCULATES TRAVEL TIMES APPEARING ON NEWBERG-DUNDEE BYPASS ELECTRONIC READERBOARDS

‘Mac News’ wondered how the ODOT/Oregon Department of Transportation calculates travel times on its electronic reader boards in Newberg and Dundee for the Newberg-Dundee Bypass.

Mac News asked ODOT and ODOT replied on the same day, 9/21/2020.

An ODOT representative told ‘Mac News’ the Newberg-Dundee Travel Time system’s travel times are calculated by the “same method we are using for all of our Travel Time corridors.”

“The ODOT travel time system uses sensors along both routes to measure the time in which it takes a Bluetooth (BT) device to reach the next sensor. Because the sensors use a hashed Media Access Control (MAC) address from a Bluetooth connected device (such as a paired phone), we only get a portion of the vehicles that are actually using the route to report back to the Bluetooth sensor.

“Although there is no simple way to connect a MAC address with a person, the MAC addresses are truncated, hashed and only retained for enough time to perform the travel time calculation as additional privacy protection. When the hashed MAC address can be matched between two points, filters remove travel times that are outliers (e.g. a car that has stopped along the route then continued or a Bluetooth device used by a pedestrian or cyclist) and the remaining travel times within that time period are averaged.

“The computed travel times are displayed on signs at each end of the two routes. These signs are updated every 2 minutes if Travel times change.”

('Mac News' photo)