View a PDF of the paper titled HALO: Hierarchical Reinforcement Learning for Large-Scale Adaptive Traffic Signal Control, by Yaqiao Zhu and 3 other authors
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Abstract:Adaptive traffic signal control (ATSC) is essential for mitigating urban congestion in modern smart cities, where traffic infrastructure is evolving into interconnected Web-of-Things (WoT) environments with thousands of sensing-and-control nodes. However, existing methods face a critical scalability-coordination tradeoff: centralized approaches optimize global objectives but become computationally intractable at city scale, while decentralized multi-agent methods scale efficiently yet lack network-level coherence, resulting in suboptimal performance. In this paper, we present HALO, a hierarchical reinforcement learning framework that addresses this tradeoff for large-scale ATSC. HALO decouples decision-making into two levels: a high-level global guidance policy employs Transformer-LSTM encoders to model spatio-temporal dependencies across the entire network and broadcast compact guidance signals, while low-level local intersection policies execute decentralized control conditioned on both local observations and global context. To ensure better alignment of global-local objectives, we introduce an adversarial goal-setting mechanism where the global policy proposes challenging-yet-feasible network-level targets that local policies are trained to surpass, fostering robust coordination. We evaluate HALO extensively on multiple standard benchmarks, and a newly constructed large-scale Manhattan-like network with 2,668 intersections under real-world traffic patterns, including peak transitions, adverse weather and holiday surges. Results demonstrate HALO shows competitive performance and becomes increasingly dominant as network complexity grows across small-scale benchmarks, while delivering the strongest performance in all large-scale regimes, offering up to 6.8% lower average travel time and 5.0% lower average delay than the best state-of-the-art.
Submission history
From: Yaqiao Zhu [view email]
[v1]
Tue, 17 Jun 2025 10:39:42 UTC (4,804 KB)
[v2]
Thu, 11 Sep 2025 21:09:24 UTC (84 KB)
[v3]
Thu, 19 Mar 2026 20:49:57 UTC (5,140 KB)


