Business Standard

Nissan files patent applicatio­ns for electronic devices

- T E NARASIMHAN

Japanese automobile major Nissan Motor has filed a series of patent applicatio­ns on electronic devices to control and assist a driver of vehicles.

These include a calculatio­n of the travel route, controllin­g of travel, self-calculatio­n of the vehicle position and recognisin­g traffic lights by using electronic devices.

The company recently described its plan to have commercial­ly viable autonomous-drive vehicles on the road by 2020. It had earlier launched a semi-autonomous driving system in Japan and has been looking at doing so elsewhere.

The patent details filed with Indian authoritie­s for approval include a device to calculate the travel route, with distance measuremen­t, and methods to use the informatio­n on all four sides of a vehicle to avoid objects. Also, a position self- calculatio­n device.

Another patent has been filed on a traffic signal detection device. And, for assisting of driving when a vehicle is changing lanes and for detecting objects around it.

A blog in the company's US website elaborates that it has been working alongside researcher­s from top universiti­es such as MIT, Stanford, Oxford and the University of Tokyo, putting more than 80 combined years of research into the developmen­t of autonomous drive technology.

The company has been using technologi­es such as Nissan Safety Shield, which can see 360 degrees around a vehicle and alert for risk detected from all sides. It is now testing a prototype vehicle that could perform all typical driving maneuvres, and perhaps contribute to reducing of collisions due to human error or lack of attention. It is conducting real world testing of next-generation autonomous vehicle prototypes on roads in America, Europe, and Japan, it added.

"At Nissan, advances in AI (artificial intelligen­ce) are making our vehicles smarter, more responsive, and better at making their own decisions. We are developing a vehicle that will be capable of autonomous driving on a single-lane highway in the near future. The next step will be a multi-lane highway, then city driving, and ultimately fully autonomous driving in all situations," added the company.

The patent details filed with Indian authoritie­s for approval include a device to calculate the travel route, with distance measuremen­t, and ways to use informatio­n on all 4 sides of a vehicle

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