Skip to main content

Neuron AI vision keeps riders on right path in Melbourne

Singaporean company to install ScootSafe Vision on all its e-scooters in Australian city
By David Arminas July 26, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Every Neuron e-scooter will be equipped with a front-facing camera (image: Neuron)

Neuron, a Singapore-based e-scooter company, will launch the ScootSafe Vision camera system across its entire 1,250-strong fleet in Melbourne, Australia.

The company said that every Neuron e-scooter will be equipped with a front-facing camera that uses AI computer vision technology to detect and correct footpath riding. It will also be used to identify and warn riders of pedestrians in their path and collect valuable data on road surfaces.

The system, which was developed in-house, detects whether an e-scooter is on the footpath in under a second. Offending riders receive a real-time audio alert telling them: “Footpath riding detected; please ride on the road.”

There will then be follow-up warnings and educational material. Repeat offenders can also be suspended after their trip. ScootSafe Vision can also be configured to reduce the e-scooter’s speed, effectively forcing riders to leave the footpath.

To further increase safety, the system alerts riders to pedestrians in their path using the e-scooter’s voice guidance that instructs them to “watch out for pedestrians and slow down”.

In future, the company notes, it will collect data on uneven road surfaces, including potholes. This could help map potentially hazardous areas and set speed limits throughout the riding area, while also providing councils with useful information for urban planning.

The ScootSafe Vision system has been tested in Melbourne over the past six months, covering over 30,000km to train the technology to recognise the city’s streets and footpaths.

Neuron also recently launched its safety-first e-scooters and e-bikes in Edmonton in the western Canadian province of Alberta. The contract includes an initial 600 safety-first e-scooters and 200 e-bikes rolled out in the city centre area, the University of Alberta and Old Strathcona.

Neuron partners with the Traffic Injury Research Foundation to promote e-scooter safety and research in Canada. Users can visit Neuron’s online riding school, ScootSafe Academy, for their local riding rules and earn free credits for future rides. The company said that its “safety ambassadors” will also be out in greater numbers during the launch period to equip new riders with the confidence to safely ride and park our vehicles.

With the launch in Edmonton, Neuron now operates in 17 Canadian towns and cities, including seven in Alberta. Riders also benefit from a range of safety innovations including voice guidance, topple detection, a 911 emergency button and a “Follow my Ride” function for added peace of mind. Advanced geofencing technology will also control where e-scooters are ridden and parked, and how fast they can travel in certain areas.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • University develops rail crossing safety technology
    June 14, 2013
    Technology developed by Melbourne’s La Trobe University’s Centre for Technology Infusion that aims to reduce or even eliminate accidents at railway level crossings is to be trialled by the Queensland government as part of a $2 million commitment to address safety at rail crossings. The system uses GPS and dedicated short range communications (DSRC) wireless technology to establish a wireless connection between trains and vehicles approaching a railway crossing. The system is designed to detect the possibili
  • Q&A: IBTTA president Mark Compton
    January 20, 2021
    Mark Compton is CEO of the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission (PTC) in Middletown, PA. IBTTA's Bill Cramer sat down with Mark to learn a bit more about his background and interests
  • Masks and AI: the new mobility reality
    June 26, 2020
    French authorities are using artificial intelligence to track face covering compliance
  • Flashing LEDs may cut ‘distracted walking’ risk
    March 24, 2020
    Flashing LED lights embedded into pavements could improve the safety of pedestrians distracted by their phones, says Australia’s Queensland University of Technology (QUT).