Skip to main content

PTV drives into simulation of automotive development

PTV Vissim Automotive designed to create responsive digital vehicle testing environment
By Adam Hill July 18, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
PTV Vissim Automotive reflects human behaviour in road traffic (image: PTV Group)

PTV Group has unveiled a new edition of its traffic simulation software aimed at the automotive sector.

PTV Vissim Automotive is designed to create a responsive digital testing environment for all vehicle types, allowing test drives for concepts which are not ready for the roads, for example.

"In today's automotive landscape, simulation is an indispensable tool for developing safe, efficient and future-proof vehicles," said Christian U. Haas, CEO of PTV Group, part of Umovity. "PTV Vissim Automotive is specifically designed to address the industry's evolving needs, from optimising alternative powertrain performance to rigorously testing the safety of automated driving functionalities."

For automotive OEMs, vehicle simulation has become a key part of the product development process.

"Simulations allow for a variety and volume of tests that would be virtually impossible in the real world," PTV says in a statement. "They reduce time and costs, enhance vehicle safety and minimise environmental impact."

PTV Vissim has been used in the past to integrate realistic traffic scenarios into the virtual test environment, such as optimising the range of electric vehicles or validating automated driving functions such as the Highway Assistant.

The new software provides a closed-loop test environment with realistic, reactive and behaviour-model-based surrounding traffic, with scenarios based on interactions between road users (cars, cyclists, pedestrians, public transport, etc.) and the traffic network.

This means an infinite number of variants can be simulated, including urban rush hour - with frequent acceleration and braking - or the ways in which highway drivers negotiate on- and off-ramps, for example.

A new traffic generation wizard can transform an empty network into an environment with heavy traffic and complex route decisions, with adjustments for different driving styles.

"In aggressive traffic scenarios, for example, there are closer cut-in manoeuvres, posing a challenge for the vehicle under test and its automated driving functions," the company explains.

Vissim Automotive reflects human behaviour in road traffic, "with a newly-developed behaviour model for automated vehicles with specific behaviours for longitudinal and lateral guidance". 

The product can interface with industry solutions such as IPG CarMaker, dSpace ASM, Hexagon Virtual Test Drive or MathWorks Simulink, enabling comprehensive co-simulations. The software supports OpenDrive network imports up to the latest version 1.8.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Continental concept vehicle addresses distracted driving
    February 8, 2013
    According to the US Department of Transportation (USDOT), an average of ten drivers in the US is killed and more than 1,100 people are injured every day as a result of accidents caused by distracted drivers. To address this ongoing concern, automotive supplier Continental has developed a concept vehicle, the driver focus vehicle, where driver assistance systems are linked to a highly versatile LED light strip to create a powerful tool against driver distraction. In its driver focus vehicle, Continental has
  • Increasing road safety with automated driver assistance systems
    January 26, 2012
    Jon Masters looks at how drivers will be trained to use the increasing number of advanced driver assistance systems being incorporated into modern cars
  • PTV launches first Shaping Transportation event
    April 29, 2013
    On 18 and 19 June 2013, world transportation experts will meet at Shaping Transportation in London, when German software and traffic consultants PTV Group extend the format of their traditional PTV Vision user group meeting. During the two days, speakers such as Dr Hans Jeekel, Rijkswaterstaat, Ministry of Infrastructure and the Environment, the Netherlands, Sanjiv N Sahai, CEO of Delhi Integrated Multi-Modal Transit Systems (DIMTS) and Allan Gooch who was responsible for transport planning during the 2012
  • Driver monitoring systems ‘will use inward-looking camera-based technology’
    November 9, 2015
    New analysis from Frost & Sullivan, Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) Strategies for Driver Monitoring Systems in Europe, indicates that, as the loss of driver attention due to fatigue or drowsiness is a common cause of road accidents worldwide, there is a clear need for driver monitoring systems (DMSs) globally. DMSs can analyse driver behaviour or detect patterns tending towards micro-sleep to issue appropriate warnings and help revive the driver’s focus. Several original equipment manufacturers (O