The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

New NTT technology can instantly analyze millions of moving cars

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

NTT Corp. plans to commercial­ize a new technology that can instantly analyze vast amounts of driving data from tens of millions of vehicles connected to the internet, perhaps as early as the end of scal 2023.

By combining data on road conditions transmitte­d by the vehicles, which are called “connected cars,” the technology will be able to quickly and accurately ascertain informatio­n related to safety and tra c congestion.

It is expected to serve as the foundation for fully automated driving systems, and NTT is considerin­g marketing the technology domestical­ly and internatio­nally to make it a global standard.

A unique data processing method developed and patented by NTT has made it possible to instantly retrieve only the necessary informatio­n, such as specific locations and times of day, from the vast amount of data sent from moving vehicles.

For example, a er identifyin­g the location of an obstacle on a road from an image captured by one car’s onboard camera, the technology can quickly inform vehicles that come after that car.

Convention­al technology takes about 20 seconds to notify drivers a er locating an obstacle, but the new technology shortens that time to about 5 seconds. is makes it easier to avoid an object immediatel­y a er it ends up on a road, thereby helping prevent accidents.

e new technology will also make it possible to monitor tra c congestion on a lane-by-lane basis, compared to the mainly road-by-road basis so far. It is expected to help predict tra c congestion in detail and suggest fuel-e cient driving routes.

When the number of connected cars increases to tens of millions, the volume of informatio­n involved is enormous, and the time required for processing has been a challenge. Based on experiment­s conducted with Toyota Motor Corp., NTT has con rmed that the system can stably process data even when more than 30 million vehicles are connected.

Now that commercial­ization of the new system is believed to be near, domestic automakers could adopt car navigation systems and other services based on the technology by the end of scal 2023.

According to the Automobile Inspection and Registrati­on Informatio­n Associatio­n, there were about 62 million vehicles, not counting trucks and buses, in Japan at the end of September 2022. e new system will even be able to handle a situation in which most of these vehicles are connected to the internet.

Technology that allows vehicles to instantly exchange informatio­n about their surroundin­gs is considered essential to the realizatio­n of fully automated driving systems that require no human operation in any location.

NTT intends to further improve the newly developed technology as a foundation for automated driving. (Jan. 5)

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