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Japan banks on 3D mapping deemed crucial for driverless cars

A car monitor shows a 3D digital map as it’s driven through Tokyo streets. Technology companies are racing to develop ultra-precise three-dimensional digital maps that can guide self-driving cars to within inches of where they are supposed to be - a hurdle the industry needs to clear if it hopes to deliver on its promise of widespread use of driverless vehicles. Photo: Yuri Kageyama/AP

A car monitor shows a 3D digital map as it’s driven through Tokyo streets. Technology companies are racing to develop ultra-precise three-dimensional digital maps that can guide self-driving cars to within inches of where they are supposed to be - a hurdle the industry needs to clear if it hopes to deliver on its promise of widespread use of driverless vehicles. Photo: Yuri Kageyama/AP

TOKYO

Associated Press

Technology companies are racing to develop ultra-precise digital maps that can guide self-driving cars within inches of where they should be -- a hurdle the industry needs to clear if it hopes to deliver on its promise of widespread use of driverless vehicles.

Japan's government is backing a three-dimensional mapping system developed by Mitsubishi Electric Corp that includes a wealth of details such as trees and pedestrians. It promises to be off by no more than 9.8 inches.

That would be a big improvement over satellite-based GPS, which is used by ships, aircraft and increasingly by drivers or on mobile phones but can be off by up to 65 feet, especially inside buildings or underground.

The developers say the improved mapping technology likely will be used first in vehicles in isolated areas such as warehouses, or it might be used to help drivers of vehicles that aren't entirely autonomous.

Its challenges and dangers were highlighted in March when a self-driving Uber SUV being tested on a street in suburban Phoenix struck and killed pedestrian in the industry's first fatality.

Autonomous, or even semi-autonomous, driving will require sensors, radars, cameras and computer software to handle acceleration, braking, steering normally done by human drivers.

That requires precise and accurate information about not just road lanes but repairs, traffic lights, crosswalks and buildings. That is relayed to moving vehicles, which requires additional telecommunications connections.

On a computer screen, such maps are masses of tiny points swimming around in virtual 3D, defining a landscape of trees, roads, signs, buildings, cars and pedestrians.

Data are collected by special vehicles carrying sensors and cameras. Those have drivers for now, but at some point autonomous vehicles are expected to take over.

"For autonomous driving, 3D high-precision maps will be very important, allowing cars to know their positions accurately and also know what the roads are like ahead," said Yasuhide Shibata, senior general manager of Mitsubishi Electric.

Starting in November, Japan will also get positioning information from its government satellites, including three launched last year, called QZS, Quasi-Zenith Satellite System.

Japan wants driverless cars on the roads by 2020, with hopes the Tokyo Olympics will showcase its technological prowess the way the 1964 Tokyo Summer Games displayed its new bullet train to the world.

But mapping services are popping up everywhere. Even Japanese automakers are also wooing mapping services other than the national brand.

Among the global players:

--TomTom, based in Amsterdam. It is working with Japanese map maker Zenrin Co.

--DeepMap, in Palo Alto, California, co-founded by James Wu, who worked for Google Maps and Apple Maps. Wu is promising 5-centimeter (2-inch) precision. Among Japanese automakers, it is working with Honda Motor Co.

--HERE, co-owned by German automakers and Intel Corp. It signed a partnership late last year with Japanese electronics and car-navigation maker Pioneer Corp with hopes of growing in Japan.

Three months ago, Toyota Motor Corp hired Mandali Khalesi from HERE to lead its automated-driving initiative.

Digital 3D maps focus on highways, where landmarks are easier to discern and define. Khalesi thinks Toyota can gain an edge by developing technology for city streets and off-road rural areas. He hopes to use satellite imagery.

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