INTEGRATING SENSOR DATA: Selecting an ADAS decision-making process
24AUTP12_01
12/01/2024
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Exactly when sensor fusion occurs in ADAS operations, late or early, impacts the entire system.
Governments have been studying Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) since at least the late 1980s. Europe's Generic Intelligent Driver Support initiative ran from 1989 to 1992 and aimed “to determine the requirements and design standards for a class of intelligent driver support systems which will conform with the information requirements and performance capabilities of the individual drivers.”
Automakers have spent the past 30 years rolling out such systems to the buying public. Toyota and Mitsubishi started offering radar-based cruise control to Japanese drivers in the mid-1990s. Mercedes-Benz took the technology global with its Distronic adaptive cruise control in the 1998 S-Class. Cadillac followed that two years later with FLIR-based night vision on the 2000 Deville DTS. And in 2003, Toyota launched an automated parallel parking technology called Intelligent Parking Assist on the Prius.
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- Citation
- Ramsey, J., "INTEGRATING SENSOR DATA: Selecting an ADAS decision-making process," Mobility Engineering, December 1, 2024.