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.    
     
As vehicle sensor use and the resulting connectivity potential continue to expand, not least in the emerging context of automated driving, they are generating escalating volumes of data from a constantly increasing number of individual on-road sources. Standardising, coordinating and processing the results to make them practically and safely usable has become a major industry challenge.  
     
In one recent initiative, Berlin, Germany-based navigation and locationing specialist 
     
The initial version has been published under a creative commons licence, to make possible the free circulation to interested parties of what would normally be copyrighted material, for them to draw on to contribute to its further development. “Our goal has always been to find a home for this specification that is open, accessible to all and global,” Dietmar Rabel, head of autonomous driving product management at Here, has said.
     
“This is a vital step along the path to creating a shared information network for safer roads. The specification is about the standardisation of data formats – a topic that has needed to be addressed by any OEM or supplier that is playing in this space.”
     
Accordingly, Sensoris is setting out to tackle the technical challenge of delivering, in a consistent form, sensor-derived data to the cloud, so as to ensure its effective communication between the data producers (on-road vehicles) and data consumers (other vehicles) via the cloud. To put the concept on the broader industry footing needed, Ertico has agreed to coordinate future activity through a dedicated innovation platform.
This will oversee the continuing development of the format into a   standard interface for broad use across the global automotive and   equipment manufacturing sectors. Early partners from three continents,   in addition to Here, include carmaker Daimler; navigation system   developers Aisin AW, Elektrobit, Harman International, Pioneer and   Robert Bosch; ADAS provider Continental Automotive; and map database   creators Navinfo and TomTom.
      
These  are now working together, along with other interested parties, through a  series of technical workshops aimed at refining the specification, with  a clear focus on near-term use cases. The timescale for full  availability is as yet unknown, with the desired result expected to  evolve over a number of years.  
 
The  initially-released rollcall of partners listed only a single vehicle  manufacturer, Daimler. But Here itself has, since 2015, been co-owned by  three German automotive companies - Daimler, Audi and BMW. Here’s Dr.  Sebastian Kurme told ITS International: “In working sessions that we  have already held in Berlin, Detroit and Tokyo, we have had  representation from almost all major automotive OEMs, all wanting to  make their contributions to moving the specification forward.
     
“We  need to work together within the industry to create the scale needed  for delivering a compelling range of services. Differentiation will come  at the service level where companies such as ours provide the enablers  at the scale and quality needed, while others, such as OEMs, concentrate  on what creates value and specificity for them.”
     
Throughout  the process, Ertico will be contributing its experience of supporting  international standards activity, built up through earlier initiatives  such as the ADASIS forum (see panel). This defines the way in which maps  connect and interact with on-board ADAS driver-support technologies.
     
Ertico’s  CEO Hermann Meyer has welcomed the tie-up, saying: “Defining a  standardised interface for exchanging information between in-vehicle  sensors and a dedicated cloud, as well as between clouds, will deliver  three major benefits. These are: the broad access, delivery and  processing of vehicle sensor data; the easy exchange of this between all  the actors involved; and the emergence of enriched location-based  services for mobility services generally as well as for automated  driving in particular.”
     
From  an industry viewpoint, Rabel has pointed out that: “Every car company  is speaking a very, very different language when it comes to the sensors  and data in the vehicle.” He accepts that, in hi-tech industry sectors,  with proprietary information forming a key element in a company’s  business model, it can be difficult to persuade an individual actor that  it’s in their best interests to cooperate with competitors on data  standardisation.
 
But,  Kurme told ITS International: “The rationale behind providing a   specification for sensor ingestion to the entire industry is in the   spirit of bringing individual companies together for the betterment of   their industry.” He sees the process as being “very similar” to that of   the EU’s 1985-1994 Prometheus (PROgraMme for a European Traffic with   Highest Efficiency and Unlimited Safety) initiative. This was a   pioneering example of a pre-competitive ITS project, set up to bring   rival companies together to lay the common foundations needed for ITS   development in the road traffic sector.
     
“We   believe that the only way to realise the industry vision of   self-driving vehicles is by data sharing,” continued Kurme. “No single   OEM or supplier has enough to do the job alone. Pooling analogous data   from millions of vehicles will be a key enabler for highly and fully   automated driving, ensuring that each vehicle has a near real-time view   of road conditions and hazards that can lead to better driving   decisions.
     
“By uniting   around a single specification, the entire industry – both partners and   competitors - can make better and faster sense of vehicle data and   increase trust in, and the adoption of, automated technologies.”
     
Currently   under development by the company is a location cloud, together with   live, high-definition, 3D maps. These can be continuously updated to   make automated driving safer, by allowing for the fact that the roads   being driven on are themselves subject to frequent changes in the real   world. Such changes can be both long-term, in the form of the physical   structure of the highway, and short-term, for example as the result of   accidents – in both cases, with vehicles regularly reporting back on   what they have identified.
     
The   company has already been making versions of these maps available to   automotive companies for ongoing automated driving trials on specific   stretches of road in Silicon Valley, in California, and the State of   Michigan in the US, as well as in France, Germany and Japan. (The   University of Michigan is a major US hub for driverless vehicle   experimentation).
     
The   technology could also be of immense benefit to road operators. Logged,   sensor-derived data could, for example, make possible the early   identification of looming safety risks - such as the degradation over   time of the visibility of painted traffic lines on the road surface,   triggering timely responses from highway maintenance departments.
     
Again,   if one passing vehicle notes the position of a speed limit sign and   another fails to see this a short time later, the onboard system can   note the fact and approximate timing of the disappearance – possibly due   to a collision – and relay the need for urgent replacement.
ADASIS
         
The Advanced Driver Assistance Systems Interface Specifications (ADASIS) Forum, again coordinated by Ertico, exists to define the ways in which navigation maps can connect and interact with on-board driver support technologies. It emerged following the arrival of an ‘Electronic Horizon’ technology patented by Here in 1999.
         
This aimed to enable a vehicle to, for example, adapt its cruise control capability, or be driven more fuel efficiently, on the basis of road attributes included in a digital map, such as slope and curvature, or the existence of traffic signs or lane information.
         
The Forum then emerged to meet the evident need for acceptable methods of data exchange to take the concept further. Its prime purpose was to enable automotive manufacturers wanting to develop advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) to access and use the information stored in the proprietary formats of navigation systems – such as map data, vehicle position and speed.
         
In June 2015, after a year of intensive activity, a Forum working group produced the first version of a new standard for ADAS as enablers for automated driving.  Most of the early Sensoris partners are also members of the Forum.
     
 
- ABOUT THE AUTHOR: David Crawford has spent 20 years writing about and researching ITS and is a Contributing Editor to ITS International.
 
    
        
        
        
        



