AI-Powered Vehicle Counting and Classification in Smart Cities

Authors

  • Hannah Weber Independent Researcher Frankfurt, Germany, DE, 60311 Author

Keywords:

smart cities; vehicle counting; vehicle classification; multi-object tracking; deep learning; edge AI; traffic analytics; domain shift; INT8 quantization; homography

Abstract

The rapid growth of urban traffic has outpaced the capabilities of traditional loop sensors and manual surveys, creating an urgent need for scalable, low-latency, and cost-effective traffic intelligence. This manuscript presents an end-to-end, AI-powered system for vehicle counting and classification designed for smart-city deployments. The pipeline integrates single-shot object detection with multi-object tracking to produce de-duplicated counts and fine-grained classes across heterogeneous camera views. The proposed method emphasizes practical constraints: camera placement variability, day–night domain shifts, adverse weather, heavy occlusions, and compute limits on edge devices. We fuse a one-stage detector (for bounding-box localization and coarse class labels) with an appearance-embedding tracker to maintain identities through occlusions and support virtual line-crossing logic that yields robust counts. An optional attribute head refines classes (e.g., car, bus, truck, two-wheeler, auto-rickshaw) using shape priors and aspect ratios.

We also introduce normalization techniques (perspective-aware regions of interest, homography-based scale cues, and temporal smoothing) that stabilize predictions under viewpoint changes. Simulation-based evaluations (CARLA + SUMO) emulate dense intersections with configurable lighting and weather, producing 100k labeled frames across five junction archetypes. The system attains high detection accuracy (mAP@0.5 = 0.81), strong tracking (IDF1 = 0.78), and reliable counts (overall MAE = 2.3 vehicles/minute lane-crossing) at 25–30 FPS on an NVIDIA Jetson-class edge device via INT8 quantization. A statistical analysis demonstrates consistent performance across classes and time-of-day, with night-time recall improved by temporal voting. The results suggest the approach is deployable at city scale, enabling real-time traffic planning, adaptive signal control, and safety analytics with modest infrastructure upgrades.

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Published

2025-12-10

How to Cite

Weber, Hannah. “AI-Powered Vehicle Counting and Classification in Smart Cities”. International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science and Engineering (IJARCSE) 1, no. 4 (December 10, 2025): Dec (22–29). Accessed January 22, 2026. https://ijarcse.org/index.php/ijarcse/article/view/99.

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