DTS Expects Gaze-Tracking System in Cars This Year
DTS announced what it called the first neuromorphic driver monitoring solution (DMS) to detect gaze tracking, head pose, identification and eyelid opening. AutoSense, which includes a DMS and an occupancy monitoring solution, is projected to be on the road in…
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2021, said the company Wednesday. It uses a raw feed from Metavision’s event-based Vision sensor. Neuromorphic sensors capture information at an equivalent frame rate of 10,000 per second without requiring active illumination, enabling sufficient low-light performance for driver monitoring features and capabilities such as rapid eye movement or micro-expressions, DTS said. The training data set was based on Xperi’s computer vision infrastructure, “reusing ground-truth from the visible and near infrared spectrums,” it said. “Being able to instantaneously detect the subtlest, almost imperceptible, face and eye motions can be lifesaving,” said Xperi Chief Technology Officer Petronel Bigioi.