Skip to main content

Mobileye and Nissan partner on autonomous driving

Mobileye and Nissan are to collaborate on a project that aims to integrate Mobileye's new Road Experience Management (REM) technology into Nissan's fleets. Mobileye REM technology will provide real-time data for precise localisation and high-definition lane data that form an important layer of information to support fully autonomous driving. The technology is based on software running on Mobileye's EyeQ processing platforms that extracts landmarks and roadway information at extremely low bandwidths, ap
February 25, 2016 Read time: 1 min
4279 Mobileye and 838 Nissan are to collaborate on a project that aims to integrate Mobileye's new Road Experience Management (REM) technology into Nissan's fleets.

Mobileye REM technology will provide real-time data for precise localisation and high-definition lane data that form an important layer of information to support fully autonomous driving.  The technology is based on software running on Mobileye's EyeQ processing platforms that extracts landmarks and roadway information at extremely low bandwidths, approximately 10kb per kilometre of driving.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Alan Turing Institute and Toyota to modernise traffic management
    June 11, 2018
    The UK’s Alan Turing Institute and the Toyota Mobility Foundation are partnering in an 18-month project which they say is intended to modernise traffic management. They will collaborate with data providers and government managers to look at the way cities could run in future. Potential outcomes include the integration of an artificial intelligence (AI) system for traffic control, a platform for interactive data manipulation to monitor traffic behaviour and developing mechanisms for fleet operators and ci
  • Flexibility, interoperability is key to future traffic management
    February 3, 2012
    Jon Taylor of Faber Maunsell and Tabatha Bailey of Transport for London describe how an unusual mix of traffic practitioners, researchers and industry are working together to build new tools for the future. As we face higher expectations for managing congestion from both citizens and politicians, and as more and more data is becoming available from new sources, our traffic management challenge is changing.
  • With C-ITS we can get ourselves connected
    June 27, 2025
    Workzones need to be safer for drivers and workers – and the technology exists to harmonise safety with mobility needs, says Swarco’s Daniel Lenczowski
  • Additional accuracy enhances ITS options
    March 19, 2015
    High accuracy and reliability of GNSS location data is available using the EGNOS services to be ready for Galileo’s expanding satellite constellation. Global navigation satellite systems (GNSS) are increasingly a building block for ITS applications from road user charging and E-call to tracking & tracing of freight. Even while the European Space Agency is still assembling the Galileo constellation, EGNOS (the European Geostationary Navigation Overlay Service) is already providing the basis of a range of ser