Skip to main content

Pioneer develops low cost 3D-LIDAR for autonomous cars

Drawing on its experience with optical disc technologies consumer electronics giant, Pioneer Corporation is developing a 3D-LIDAR (light detection and ranging) compact, high performance low-cost sensor for autonomous vehicles. The company has completed trial manufacture of the sensor and will begin in-car trials in 2016. During the in-car trials, Pioneer will launch advanced map creation using mapping vehicles fitted with 3D-LiDAR, with Increment P Corporation, its map creation subsidiary. In the near fu
September 7, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Drawing on its experience with optical disc technologies consumer electronics giant, Pioneer Corporation is developing a 3D-LIDAR (light detection and ranging) compact, high performance low-cost sensor for autonomous vehicles. The company has completed trial manufacture of the sensor and will begin in-car trials in 2016.

During the in-car trials, Pioneer will launch advanced map creation using mapping vehicles fitted with 3D-LiDAR, with Increment P Corporation, its map creation subsidiary. In the near future, the company aims to develop and propose an efficient creation and operation system for advanced map data, enabling differences in map data to be automatically processed, with low operational costs, by collecting surrounding environment data in real-time from general use vehicles also equipped with 3D-LiDAR.

In response to expectations for an even safer, more reliable, and more comfortable ‘automobile society’ in the future, discussion and development are underway in various fields including the advanced map that will be necessary for automated driving, sensors for real-time appraisal of vehicle location and the surrounding environment, and a network system for updating and disseminating such information at any time. Of these, Pioneer believes the 3D-LiDAR driving space sensor is a key device indispensable to the achievement of highly advanced automated driving. In addition to being able to finely detect the distance of objects several dozen meters ahead, as well as their width, even object identification becomes possible, based on shape detection.

In the future, Pioneer plans to create a much more compact and lower-cost version to overcome the hurdles of size and price that hinder the spread of the system.

Backed by its wide range of resources including optical and navigation technologies, probe data, cloud platforms and the expertise of its map creation subsidiary, Pioneer aims to become an ‘essential company’ in the society of automated driving. Via a group-wide partnership, Pioneer aims to provide indispensable key devices for automated driving and advanced driving support of the future, and to propose lower-cost, highly advanced map data creation and operation systems.

Related Content

  • November 26, 2013
    New name offers new solutions
    Pete Goldin examines Nokia’s rationale for combining its location services, digital mapping and other capabilities under the HERE brand. While it has divested itself of its mobile phone business to Microsoft, Nokia has kept hold of its HERE business unit and brand which incorporates the company’s location services with digital mapping and other capabilities. The creation of HERE is much more than rebranding as its services are heading off the map and into the cloud. “HERE offers the first location cloud
  • March 28, 2022
    Lidar: recipes for success
    Lidar is being deployed all over the world - and you can even read a cookbook on the subject...
  • January 5, 2016
    Machine vision takes ITS further than the eye can see
    Vitronic’s John Yalda looks at how machine vision has become an integral part of many ITS deployments and why it complements, rather than replaces, ANPR. New and conventional business concepts like online shopping and mail order business are becoming more established in the cultures of fast-growing economies and increasing the demand for flexibility in the freight transportation and logistics industry. Road transport has become the preferred infrastructure for freight forwarding and several studies predict
  • June 30, 2016
    Here, automotive companies move forward connected car data standard
    Following successful discussions with international automotive and mapping companies in Europe, the US and Asia, Here has now submitted the design for Sensoris, a universal data format, to Ertico-ITS Europe, which has agreed to continue it as an Innovation Platform to evolve it into a standardised interface specification for use broadly across the automotive industry. To date, 11 major automotive and supplier companies have already joined the Sensoris Innovation Platform now under the coordination of Ert