Skip to main content

Autopilot consortium demos IoT benefits for AVs

By Ben Spencer February 7, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Autopilot showcases the benefits of IoT for autonomous driving

A consortium of European partners demonstrated this week how the Internet of Things (IoT) can be used to improve autonomous driving.

Autopilot (Automated driving progressed by IoT) is a large-scale pilot funded by the European Commission in which partners such as Ertico – ITS Europe and TNO tested IoT-enabled autonomous vehicles (AVs) in France, Finland, the Netherlands, Italy and Spain. 

Other partners involved in Autopilot include IBM, Continental and Huawei.

Speaking to media at an event in Versailles, near Paris, Bart Netten, senior scientific researcher at TNO, said IoT brings environmental detection into the vehicle which is then fused with on-board sensors. 

“This information allows us to look beyond the line of sight of on-board sensors, and what we will see is how we can detect obstacles, pedestrians, cyclists and crowds,” he explained. “For autonomous driving, this means we can anticipate obstacles and road hazards earlier than the vehicle can detect. Having this information means we can re-route autonomous vehicles, which saves time because you don't have to slow down for pedestrians or crowds."

According to Netten, new functionality can assist AVs with platooning information to help them find each other.

“By providing a cloud service, we allow users to organise themselves from longer distances. This service offers the route, schedule and information on how to team up at the rendezvous point at the same time,” he concluded.

During the first demonstration in Versailles this week, the vehicle received information on the status and phases of a traffic light in order to carry out a safe approach. An IoT camera was used to publish the detection of a vulnerable road user (VRU) while an IoT traffic light released status and phase information on the IBM Watson IoT platform.

In a separate trial, VRUs were detected through IoT smartphone detection through the use of geofencing and in-vehicle cameras. 

Related Content

  • April 12, 2013
    Intelligent intersection control
    Intelligent intersection control systems have a growing role to play in making urban traffic more efficient. Robin Meczes reports. The idea of every traffic light turning green as you approach it has long been a dream for many an urban driver – and none more so than those driving heavy goods vehicles (HGVs), which are slow and difficult to bring to a halt and then accelerate back to normal travel speed. But that dream has become a reality for some drivers in a small number of cities around Europe in the las
  • April 12, 2022
    Drover AI’s Alex Nesic: ‘We’re still in the basement level of micromobility’
    The micromobility revolution has reshaped the way we get around cities, but it has created some problems too. Drover AI’s PathPilot is here to help cities – and pedestrians – Alex Nesic tells Adam Hill
  • November 2, 2016
    Ertico coordinates big data debate
    David Crawford finds that agreeing a common data standard for auto manufacturers’ onboard sensors, navigation system companies and map makers is proving a complex task.
  • February 1, 2012
    Need for harmonisation in ITS standards
    As the calendar rolls over, and we hop from continent to continent and World Congress to World Congress, where Memoranda of Understanding and cooperation agreements are the headline news, it is easy for those not intimately involved to forget that standards definition is a well-nigh continual process. Significant progress has been made in recent months towards achieving the critical mass and economies of scale which are going to drive development and deployment in, amongst other things, cooperative infrastr