PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

AI review unveils new strategies for fixing missing traffic data in smart cities

2025-08-27
(Press-News.org) A new review published in Artificial Intelligence and Autonomous Systems(AIAS) highlights how artificial intelligence can tackle the pervasive problem of missing traffic data in intelligent transportation systems. The study categorizes and compares leading data imputation methods, offering a clear roadmap for researchers and city planners to improve traffic management and smart city operations.

As cities worldwide deploy more sensors and intelligent systems to manage traffic, a hidden problem is undermining their efforts: missing data. Sensor failures, communication dropouts, and harsh environmental conditions often lead to gaps in traffic information, complicating everything from real-time traffic light control to long-term urban planning.

In a comprehensive new review published in AIAS, researchers from Shandong Technology and Business University survey the latest AI-powered techniques designed to fill in these data gaps automatically. The paper, titled “A Brief Review on Missing Traffic Data Imputation in Intelligent Transportation Systems,” provides a systematic classification of existing methods and compares their performance under various missing data scenarios.

“When traffic data is incomplete, it affects signal timing, congestion prediction, and even emergency response planning,” says Kaiyuan Wang, the lead author of the study. “Our goal was to provide a clear framework to help choose the right method for the right situation.”

The review divides data imputation techniques into two broad categories: structure-based methods, which rely on the inherent low-rank structure and spatiotemporal patterns of traffic data; and learning-based methods, which use deep learning models like GANs, GNNs, and attention mechanisms to learn complex data relationships.

“Structure-based methods are often more interpretable and work well with moderate missing rates,” explains Dr. Xiaobo Chen, the corresponding author. “But in cases of high missing rates or complex patterns, learning-based methods—especially those using graph neural networks or generative models—can be more powerful.”

The study also summarizes publicly available datasets—such as PeMS, METR-LA, and TaxiBJ—and standard evaluation metrics like MAE, MAPE, and RMSE, providing a valuable resource for researchers looking to benchmark their models.

Perhaps most practically, the team tested multiple methods under unified conditions and developed a decision-making workflow to help users select the best approach based on missing data type, rate, and available computational resources.

Despite these advances, challenges remain. “Real-world traffic data is messy—it’s not just randomly missing. It can be influenced by traffic signals, weather, or even time of day,” says Wang. “We also need methods that are fast enough for real-time use and that can quantify uncertainty in their predictions.”

Looking ahead, the authors highlight several promising directions, including multi-source data fusion, lightweight AI models for edge computing, and uncertainty-aware imputation techniques.

“We’re moving toward a future where AI doesn’t just fill in missing data—it understands why it’s missing and how to best reconstruct it in a way that supports safer and smarter cities,” adds Dr. Chen.

This review offers both a scholarly resource and a practical guide for anyone working in smart transportation, urban analytics, or AI-enabled infrastructure management.

The paper, “A Brief Review on Missing Traffic Data Imputation in Intelligent Transportation Systems,” is now available in AIAS.

Reference:
Wang K, Chen X, Xu N. A brief review on missing traffic data imputation in intelligent transportation systems. Artif. Intell. Auton. Syst. 2025(2):0006, https://doi.org/10.55092/aias20250006

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists discovered hopfion crystals – which are flying in spacetime

2025-08-27
An internationally joint research group between Singapore and Japan has unveiled a blueprint for arranging exotic, knot-like patterns of light into repeatable crystals that extend across both space and time. The work lays out how to build and control “hopfion” lattices using structured beams at two different colors, pointing to future systems for dense, robust information processing in photonics.   Hopfions are three-dimensional topological textures whose internal “spin” patterns weave into closed, interlinked loops. They have been observed ...

For bees, diet isn’t one-size-fits-all

2025-08-27
Move over gym rats. Bumble bees are now the true masters of macros. In the first long-term, community-level field study of wild bumble bee nutrition, a team of ecologists led by Northwestern University and the Chicago Botanic Garden discovered that wild bees aren’t just flitting from flower to flower, collecting pollen at random. Instead, they are strategically targeting flowers that enable them to carefully balance their protein, fat and carbs. Focusing on pollen consumption, the study revealed that coexisting bee species occupy two distinct nutrient niches. Larger bodied bees with longer tongues prefer pollen that’s ...

How a malaria-fighting breakthrough provides lasting protection

2025-08-27
A relatively new class of insecticide that can be disseminated on something the size of a sheet of paper offers protection for up to a year against mosquitoes that spread malaria, as well as dengue, West Nile, yellow fever, and Zika, UC San Francisco researchers have found. In a systematic review of more than 25 years of data on some 1.7 million mosquitoes, researchers concluded that this form of repellent — called a “spatial emanator” because it distributes chemicals through the air — can prevent more than ...

Cognitive Behavioural therapy can alter brain structure and boost grey matter volume, study shows

2025-08-27
Psychotherapy leads to measurable changes in brain structure. Researchers at Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) and the University of Münster have demonstrated this for the first time in a study in “Translational Psychiatry” by using cognitive behavioural therapy. The team analysed the brains of 30 patients suffering from acute depression. After therapy, most of them showed changes in areas responsible for processing emotions. The observed effects are similar to those already known from studies on medication. Around ...

Largest ever study into cannabis use investigates risk of paranoia and poor mental health in the general population

2025-08-27
New research from the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King’s College London, in partnership with the University of Bath, has found that the reasons why a person chooses to use cannabis can increase their risk of developing paranoia.  The use and potency of cannabis is increasing worldwide, and dependence and cannabis-induced psychosis are also greatly increasing as a result, especially in North America. Two new research papers, both using data from Cannabis & Me - the largest survey of its kind - have identified key risk factors associated ...

Most US neurologists prescribing MS drugs have received pharma industry cash

2025-08-26
Nearly 80% of US neurologists prescribing drugs for multiple sclerosis (MS) received at least one pharma industry payment, with higher volume prescribers more likely to be beneficiaries, finds a 5 year analysis of Medicare database payments, published in the open access journal BMJ Open. And those in receipt of these payments were more likely to prescribe that company’s drugs, especially if the sums involved were larger, sustained, and recent, the findings indicate. Because of the lifelong nature of MS, effective therapies are usually continued indefinitely unless a patient’s clinical response changes, explain the researchers. And MS drug prescriptions are ...

A growing baby planet photographed for first time in a ring of darkness

2025-08-26
A team of astronomers has detected for the first time a growing planet outside our solar system, embedded in a cleared gap of a multi-ringed disk of dust and gas. The team, led by University of Arizona astronomer Laird Close and Richelle van Capelleveen, an astronomy graduate student at Leiden Observatory in the Netherlands, discovered the unique exoplanet using the University of Arizona's MagAO-X extreme adaptive optics system at the Magellan Telescope in Chile, the U of A's Large Binocular Telescope in Arizona and the Very Large Telescope at the European Southern Observatory in Chile. ...

Brain’s immune cells key to wiring the adolescent brain

2025-08-26
Making a smoothie, going for an evening walk, or having empathy for a loved one are all examples of executive functions that are controlled by the brain’s frontal cortex. This area of the brain goes through profound change throughout adolescence, and it is during this time that abnormalities in maturing circuits can set the stage for neurodevelopmental disorders, such as schizophrenia and ADHD. Researchers at the Del Monte Institute for Neuroscience at the University of Rochester have discovered that microglia, the brain’s immune cells, ...

KAIST develops AI that automatically detects defects in smart factory manufacturing processes even when conditions change​

2025-08-26
Recently, defect detection systems using artificial intelligence (AI) sensor data have been installed in smart factory manufacturing sites. However, when the manufacturing process changes due to machine replacement or variations in temperature, pressure, or speed, existing AI models fail to properly understand the new situation and their performance drops sharply. KAIST researchers have developed AI technology that can accurately detect defects even in such situations without retraining, achieving performance improvements ...

Research alert: Alcohol opens the floodgates for bad bacteria

2025-08-26
Alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) is a major cause of liver transplantation and death worldwide, and its impact is only growing. In 2022, the annual cost of ALD in the United States was $31 billion. By 2040, this number could be as high as $66 billion. ALD has limited therapeutic options, so scientists are looking for new ways to target the molecular biology of ALD to help prevent its occurrence or reduce its severity. Now, scientists at University of California San Diego School of Medicine have found that chronic alcohol use impairs the production of a key cellular signaling ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Engineers develop solid lubricant to replace toxic materials in farming

Repurposing gemstone polishing waste to create smart cement

Patient-physician messaging by race, ethnicity, insurance type, and preferred language

Unrecognized motor difficulties and developmental coordination disorder in preschool children

Background genetic variants influence clinical features in complex disorders

Smarter battery tech knows whether your EV will make it home

Overactive microRNAs block fat cell development in progeria

Crosswalk confusion: MA drivers flummoxed by pedestrian hybrid beacons, find UMass Amherst researchers

Study shows heart disease mortality disproportionately burdens low-income communities in California

Intracardiac echocardiography recognized as ‘transformative’ imaging modality in new SCAI position statement

Study finds ‘man’s best friend’ slows cellular aging in female veterans

To get representative health data, researchers hand out fitbits

Hiring in high-growth firms: new study explores the timing of organizational changes

Boosting work engagement through a simple smartphone diary

Climate change may create ‘ecological trap’ for species who can’t adapt

Scientists create ChatGPT-like AI model for neuroscience to build one of the most detailed mouse brain maps to date

AI and omics unlock personalized drugs and RNA therapies for heart disease

2023 ocean heatwave ‘unprecedented but not unexpected’

Johns Hopkins researchers develop AI to predict risk of US car crashes

New drug combination offers hope for men with advanced prostate cancer

New discovery finds gene converts insulin-producing cells into blood-sugar boosters

Powerful and precise multi-color lasers now fit on a single chip

Scientists agree chemicals can affect behavior, but industry workers more reluctant about safety testing

DNA nanospring measures cellular motor power

Elsevier Foundation and RIKEN launch “Envisioning Futures” report: paving the way for gender equity and women’s leadership in Japanese research

Researchers discover enlarged areas of the spinal cord in fish, previously found only in four-limbed vertebrates

Bipolar disorder heterogeneity decoded: transforming global psychiatric treatment approaches

Catching Alport syndrome through universal age-3 urine screening

Instructions help you remember something better than emotions or a good night’s sleep

Solar energy is now the world’s cheapest source of power, a Surrey study finds

[Press-News.org] AI review unveils new strategies for fixing missing traffic data in smart cities