Skip to main content

World launch by Lector Vision

Lector Vision, an international specialist in artificial vision that enables a wide range of applications in the traffic and transport sector, will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2018 for the world launch of two innovative new products – the Cube camera and Traffic Guard, a ground-breaking software analytics development that was funded by the Spanish government. The company’s Cube camera was developed in-house at Lector Vision’s Madrid headquarters and has a wide range of applications, including tolling
February 19, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

7545 Lector Vision, an international specialist in artificial vision that enables a wide range of applications in the traffic and transport sector, will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2018 for the world launch of two innovative new products – the Cube camera and Traffic Guard, a ground-breaking software analytics development that was funded by the Spanish government.

The company’s Cube camera was developed in-house at Lector Vision’s Madrid headquarters and has a wide range of applications, including tolling control, car parking and traffic monitoring. It combines the advantages of machine vision cameras and IP cameras; has a top-performing Sony CMOS sensor; motorised lenses; RAW image processing; advanced on-board OCR processing; and full camera control, including digital inputs and outputs. The Cube camera has three H264 video channels per camera so that, for instance, one channel can undertake OCR while the other two channels can send the video signal, in real time, to a different control centre.

Lector Vision’s ground-breaking Traffic Guard analytics software system, development of which was financed by CDTI (Spanish Ministry of Economy), can detect vehicles or objects, and follow them into the image, capturing a range of user-defined different parameters. The system can thus autonomously monitor, control, classify and define alerts for an array of different behaviours on the road.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Parifex speed cameras: picture perfect
    September 30, 2020
    From speed cameras to smart cities, image processing and AI – Parifex is not short of ambition. Nathalie Deguen tells Adam Hill where the French company is heading next
  • H264 encoder card
    January 27, 2012
    Advanced Micro Peripherals has introduced a high-performance, dual-channel, highdefinition, ultra low latency H264 encoder card, the H264-ULLcPCI, for CompactPCI systems. It allows system builders to easily add high-definition video capture and H.264/MPEG-4 AVC (Part 10) encoding to their embedded CompactPCI equipment.
  • Allied Vision launches new camera models
    October 28, 2016
    Allied Vision will demonstrate its camera portfolio at Vision 2016 with six different ‘islands’ to showcase the company’s latest camera models. The company has expanded its camera portfolio with several new models with the latest CMOS sensors, including the Allied Vision Manta GigE vision family with Sony Pregius sensors.
  • Network video alternative to machine vision in urban applications
    January 11, 2013
    It would be easy to fall into the trap of seeing machine vision as the vision-based solution for ITS and traffic, however Patrik Anderson, Director Business Development Transportation of Axis Communications, notes that many of the applications which are coming to be associated with machine vision – and, indeed, many of the characteristics, such as at-the-edge analytics and image processing – are also possible with open-standard networked video. Networked video brings a whole host of advantages, such as the