Global Times

Lab creates smart driving system

Military microchip, sensors potential game-changer: report

- By Yin Han

A Beijing lab is developing a smart system for military vehicles that researcher­s believe could revolution­ize driving in all kinds of terrain and conditions, reports said Tuesday.

A microchip a few centimeter­s in size empowers the system to realize accurate real-time sensing of the driving environmen­t, researcher­s at the Second Academy of the China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporatio­n told Science and Technology Daily on Tuesday.

Its deep neural network can help the driver to detect blurry objects and obstacles ahead by filtering out distractio­ns such as backlighti­ng and shadows, the Beijing-based newspaper reported.

The team is working on an intelligen­t sensor to enable military vehicles to move at night without lighting or in changeable lighting, the paper said.

The sensor will also perform in all weathers by combining and computing algorithmi­c data about visible light, infrared and millimeter wave radar, the report said.

“The sensor can help reduce driver misjudgmen­t in extreme conditions such as a dark environmen­t and complex terrain, which can greatly improve the movement speed,” Song Zhongping, a military expert and TV commentato­r, told the Global Times.

Drivers should still attain a high capability to judge a complicate­d situation, Song noted, and should not rely on the assistance even though the smart system should boost safety.

The system will enter smallscale production by the end of 2018, project team leader Guo Rui was quoted as saying.

The accuracy of the intelligen­t driving system was 90.05 percent and it took 0.03 seconds to process an image whereas the record is 90.55 percent and 4 seconds, the report said.

The technology could improve safety in civilian vehicles, Jia Xinguang, executive director at the China Automobile Dealers Associatio­n, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

“For example, the car can automatica­lly stop when it encounters a pedestrian or barriers even in bad conditions such as dark night where a human possibly might not notice.”

Jia suggested research begin on cutting costs for civilian use.

The market for advanced driver assistance will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 10.44 percent from 2016 to 2021, according to Marketsand­Markets, an India-based market research firm. The market is expected to reach $42.40 billion by 2021.

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