Skip to main content

KoMoTo unveils through windscreen face recognition

Taiwanese company KoMoTo Enterprise is showing through-the-windscreen face recognition system on its stand in hall 12. According to product manager Rick Huang, the system can be used in two ways; either to confirm the identity of errant drivers or to locate the whereabouts of a wanted individual. The need to confirm the identify the drivers of speeding and red-light running vehicle for enforcement purposes is likely to account for the majority of uses. However, in countries issuing photo ID driving
March 21, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
In the frame: Rick Huang

Taiwanese company 8341 Komoto Enterprise is showing through-the-windscreen face recognition system on its stand in hall 12. According to product manager Rick Huang, the system can be used in two ways; either to confirm the identity of errant drivers or to locate the whereabouts of a wanted individual.

The need to confirm the identify the drivers of speeding and red-light running vehicle for enforcement purposes is likely to account for the majority of uses. However, in countries issuing photo ID driving licences, if licence plate information is not available then the system can used to cross check the complete database of registered drivers to refer potential matches for human confirmation.

Alternatively, if the authority is hunting an individual, their image can be uploaded so the system will search for them via all cameras connected to the system. In both cases the number of potential matches is influenced by the size of the database being searched.

Also on the stand is a combined speed, ANPR and WIM package and the company’s range of LED strobes (white light, IR and coloured) designed for enforcement purposes.

Stand: 12.409

%$Linker: 2 External 0 0 0 link-external www.komoto.com Komoto website link false http://www.komoto.com/EN/ false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Kapsch showcases vehicle-to-vehicle technologies
    October 15, 2012
    Cooperative systems in which vehicles communicate with each other (vehicle-to-vehicle or V2V) and to the road infrastructure (V2I) and collectively referred to as V2X, will build the backbone for safe driving as well as efficient and environmentally-friendly road usage in the future. So Kapsch is very much looking to the future with its V2X demonstration at the ITS World Congress by showcasing how such cooperative communication can avoid accidents, optimise fuel consumption, driving speed and travel time. P
  • Annual Meeting Spotlight
    May 1, 2012
    Investor Roundtable: The Importance of Private Investment to Advancing Transportation Investment in the transportation technology sector is at a high. Join a group of private investors from Guggenheim Securities, Raymond James & Associates, Intel Capital and Fontinalis Partners, who are actively engaged in the transportation technology space.
  • New report: technology is a game changer
    September 18, 2013
    For decades, planners and engineers have gathered traffic data using expensive, time-consuming surveys and processes. A new AirSage white paper, "The Future of Transportation Studies: A Comparative Review" looks at the emerging trends that are transforming the transportation planning industry and examines traditional traffic data collection methods and new complementary technologies at the forefront of the transportation industry.
  • Laser Technology latest sensors
    May 21, 2012
    Laser Technology’s third-generation S and T Series laser sensors offer the ability to profile vehicles, measure speed, count, and measure the time between vehicles all in one operation. This information can be used for real-time traffic management and trend analysis.