Book review: Control of traffic systems in buildings

Marjy-Liisa Siikonen’s  review of “The Red Elevator Book” is available online. The first part of the review reads as follows :
Control of Traffic Systems in Buildings gives a refreshing view of the sophisticated mathematical methods and control of passenger transportation and material handling for low- and high-rise buildings. The book is divided into four parts: Transportation Systems, Modelling and Simulation, Intelligent Control Methods for Transportation Systems and finally Topics in Modern Control for Transportation Systems.
The review concludes as follows: “Control of Traffic Systems in Buildings presents an innovative combination of recent mathematical methods of industrial control systems. It functions as an excellent reference guide to real-time control systems, for instance, for university students and control system developers.
Here is the link to the review: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/rnc.1515/full and the full citation:
Siikonen, M.-L. (2010), Control of traffic systems in buildings, Advances in Industrial Control (AIC). S. Markon, H. Kita, H. Kise, T. Bartz-Beielstein, Springer London Limited: London, 2006. ISSN 1430-9491, ISBN-10: 1-84628-448-1, ISBN-13: 978-1-84628-448-9. Int. J. Robust Nonlinear Control, 20: 1311–1312. doi:10.1002/rnc.1515

Here is a description of the “Red Elevator Book”, which can be accessed on Springer’s webpage:
Transportation systems in buildings are part of everyday life: whether ferrying people twenty storeys up to the office or moving luggage to the airport check-in, 21st-century man relies on them.
Control of Traffic Systems in Buildings presents the state of the art in the analysis and control of transportation systems in buildings focusing primarily on elevator groups. The theory and design of passenger traffic and cargo transport systems are covered, together with actual operational examples and topics of special current interest such as:
• noisy, on-line and algorithmic optimization;
• simulation-based modeling of passengers and goods;
• control of cooperative agent-oriented systems;
• proposal for a benchmark to compare new control methods;
• deployment and testing of transportation systems.
Special attention is given to the techniques and uses of simulation and a working simulator is included that allows readers to explore the subject for themselves.
The safe running of such automated traffic systems, though vital, gets rather taken for granted but workers in elevator control have pioneered the development of many modern control systems for employment in all sorts of traffic and scheduled systems being among the first to realize the potential of techniques like fuzzy logic, neural networks and genetic algorithms. For this reason, this exposition of recent work in in-building transport control will be of considerable interest to researchers and engineers in many areas of control, particularly those working in optimal or supervisory control, urban transportation systems and intelligent transport systems as well as to those directly interested in the elevator control systems under discussion.

The “Red Elevator Book”