A Resilient Real-Time Traffic Control System
Abstract
This paper describes a resilient control system operating in a critical infrastructure. The system is a real-time weather responsive system that accesses weather information that provides near-real-time atmospheric and... [ view full abstract ]
This paper describes a resilient control system operating in a critical infrastructure. The system is a real-time weather responsive system that accesses weather information that provides near-real-time atmospheric and pavement observation data that is used to adapt traffic signal timing to increase safety. Since the system controls part of a safety critical application survivability and resilience considerations must be an integral part of the system architecture. In order to provide adaptation to system behavior as the result of faults or malicious acts an architecture is presented that monitors itself and adapts its behavior in real-time. The main theoretical contributions are the combination and extension of approaches introduced in previous work. The theory of certifying executions is extended by three concepts: the detection of dependency violations, exceptions trig- gers, and sensor analysis are considered; a dual-bound threshold approach for detecting off-nominal executions is introduced; profiling is augmented with the concept of behavior sets. Extensive evidence of the effectiveness of the solutions based on a one-year observation of the system in action is presented.
Authors
-
Ahmed Serageldin
(military technical college)
-
Axel Krings
(university of idaho)
Topic Areas
Security and Privacy in ITS , Transportation Security , Travel Behavior Under ITS
Session
Fr-B7 » Travel Behavior and Information Guidance (13:40 - Friday, 18th September, La Palma)