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

  • TransWiseway and IBM building China’s largest connected vehicles platform
    June 2, 2014
    IBM is collaborating with Beijing transportation information service systems provider TransWiseway Information Technology to build the largest connected vehicles platform in China that will transform the development of the country’s connected car services industry. The cloud-based platform will use advanced analytics for applications that offer real-time in-vehicle services to mobile devices, such as weather advisories, traffic alerts and alternate route suggestions.
  • Smarter mapping makes for more informed decisions
    December 2, 2016
    Following his keynote presentation at the 2016 ITS World Congress in Melbourne, ITS International caught up with Esri founder Jack Dangermond. It is getting close to half a century ago that Jack Dangermond and his wife Laura founded the Environmental Research Systems Institute – known today as Esri - of which he remains president.
  • Reversible express lanes and open road tolling combat congestion
    March 2, 2012
    Teri England, Diamond Consulting Services, details the construction of construction of a world first - reversible express lanes with cashless multi-lane ORT - on the Tampa Hillsborough Expressway
  • When weather warnings get hyperlocal
    August 24, 2016
    David Crawford looks at new technologies to cope with the age-old problem of driving in bad weather. On the 10-year average, between 2005 and 2014 bad weather contributed to more than 1.5 million vehicle crashes in the US each year, resulting in more than 800,000 injuries and 7,400 deaths. These were the findings of analysis by Booz Allen Hamilton of NHTSA data which concluded that the loss of life, hospital treatment and damage to assets costs an annual average of $42bn.