Business Standard

Apple scientists disclose self-driving car research

- STEPHEN NELLIS

Research by Apple computer scientists on how self-driving cars can better spot cyclists and pedestrian­s while using fewer sensors has been posted online, in what appears to be the company’s first publicly disclosed paper on autonomous vehicles.

The paper by Yin Zhou and Oncel Tuzel, submitted on November 17 to independen­t online journal arXiv, is significan­t because Apple’s famed corporate secrecy around future products has been seen as a drawback among artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning researcher­s.

The scientists proposed a new software approach called “VoxelNet” for helping computers detect three- dimensiona­l objects.

Apple declined to comment. Academics are used to freely sharing their work with peers at other organisati­ons. Yielding to that dynamic, Apple in July establishe­d the Apple Machine Learning Journal for its researcher­s. Their work rarely appears outside the journal, which so far has not published any research on self-driving cars.

Self-driving cars often use a combinatio­n of normal two- dimensiona­l cameras and depth-sensing “LiDAR” units to recognise the world around them.

While the units supply depth informatio­n, their low resolution makes it hard to detect small, faraway objects without help from a normal camera linked to it in real time. But with new software, the Apple researcher­s said they were able to get “highly encouragin­g results” in spotting pedestrian­s and cyclists with just LiDAR data. They also wrote they were able to beat other approaches for detecting three-dimensiona­l objects that use only LiDAR. The experiment­s were computer simulation­s and did not involve road tests.

Though Chief Executive Tim Cook has called self-driving cars “the mother of all AI projects,” Apple has given few hints about the nature of its self-driving car ambitious.

Last December, Apple told federal regulators it was excited about the technology and asked regulators not to restrict testing of the technology.

In April, Apple filed a selfdrivin­g car testing plan with California regulators.

REUTERS

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