An Empirical Model for Multilane Road Traffic
Abstract
Before we can construct models for multilane traffic flow, we must be able to describe single-lane traffic. This paper considers some of these methods of description including the use of headway and counting distributions. Another method of describing point processes is by means of product densities. These are essentially joint probabilities of two or more vehicles passing a point at different specified times. Product densities have been used in many fields including particle physics, ecology, and road traffic. The idea of using product densities is simple and attractive, but they do have two major disadvantages:
except in simple cases, headway distributions are very difficult to derive from product densities, and
product density estimates for different time lags are correlated, so that tests of hypotheses are not easy to perform.

