CES 2016: ZF Allows Cars to See, Think, and Act Autonomously

CES 2016: ZF Allows Cars to See, Think, and Act Autonomously

During its first appearance at CES in Las Vegas and using the slogan “Shaping the next decade of automated driving”, ZF will highlight its strengthened commitment to the megatrend of autonomous driving since its acquisition of TRW. The company is in a unique market position to develop and significantly accelerate automated driving functionality of the future with its leading portfolio of sensors, intelligent control units, and actuators.

Automated driving requires more than just intelligent mechanics. The vehicle’s systems will also need comprehensive, precise, and reliable information about the state of the driver. During highly automated driving, where the driver will no longer have to monitor the system, he or she will remain responsible for taking back control of the vehicle at any time when prompted. Driver monitoring is therefore a critical part of the development process – and one where ZF has a solid understanding. At CES, the company will demonstrate the multi-faceted interaction between human and machine, with innovative concepts in the area of human-machine interface (HMI).

“In the coming decade, our technologies will decisively shape the path towards autonomous driving,” announces Dr. Stefan Sommer, ZF's CEO in the run-up to the CES 2016. Thanks to powerful sensors, complex electronic control units, and mechatronic systems, ZF’s technology is already enabling vehicles to see, think, and act autonomously. According to Sommer, ZF intends to significantly strengthen its expertise in this area. “Our goal is to enable automated driving functions across all vehicle segments. Only through high market penetration can we make a real difference to overall road safety.”

The ZF Concept Cockpit showcases four practical integrated innovations, including (1) a special steering wheel with hands on/off detection, (2) a touch display with realistic key simulation, (3) a new, highly precise facial and emotion recognition feature, and (4) actively responsive and communicating seat belts.

Active safety systems are the basis for automated driving functions. These help protect passengers, drivers, pedestrians and other vulnerable road users in emergency situations. Active safety systems from ZF will enable automated functions in emergency situations such as automatic emergency braking or emergency steering maneuvers. The next step is geared toward highway driving, with partial and fully automated drive functions set to considerably increase safety and comfort. ZF’s long-term goal is to also increase safety in highly complex city traffic.

ZF believes that the initial potential of future urban mobility lies in intelligent networking, namely, interconnecting the chassis, driveline, and driver assist systems, as demonstrated in its electrically powered, cloud-connected Advanced Urban Vehicle that features partially automated functionality. This prototype vehicle represents ZF's new competencies following its acquisition of TRW.

     

   Related items


  • What Makes Autonomous Vehicles Autonomous?
    An artificial neural network is trained by showing it a driving situation and telling it the desired response. It then adjusts each node so the response of the neural network mimics the desired... Read more
  • Visteon’s next-generation vehicle infotainment platform
    Visteon Corporation – a technology leader in the fast-growing automotive cockpit electronics and infotainment segment – will showcase its latest innovations for the connected car at CES® 2017 Jan. 5-8 in Las Vegas. This will be Visteon’s 18th year at... Read more
  • Nissan introduces driverless towing
    The Nissan Motor Co has introduced Intelligent Vehicle Towing (IVT), a fully automated vehicle towing system, at its Oppama Plant in... Read more
  • Valeo’s autonomous vehicle completes 24 hours on the Paris Beltway in a world first
    Valeo's Cruise4U autonomous vehicle has completed 24 hours on the Paris beltway. The car logged a total of 766km, the equivalent of driving around Paris more than 20 times, and nearly 99% of the distance and time was completed in autonomous mode, not counting breaks and... Read more
  • Safety Ready For Impact
    Here in the cavernous sled lab, staff work intensively over the cab section of a pickup truck. Window glass has been removed and the windshield has been replaced by plexiglass, but the interior is present, and a crash test dummy is belted into the seat. Angelo Adler is Senior Manager Systems Engineering at ZF TRW’s Occupant Safety Systems (OSS) test center in Washington Township, Michigan. He... Read more
Comments
Login to post comments

MOD_LOGINREGISTER_LOGIN_TITLE

Remember Me