AI Takes Autonomous Cars From Sci-fi To Driveway

Australian Catholic University

AI-powered camera technology developed by Australian Catholic University will enable cars to react faster than an Olympic sprinter, see in 3D and make autonomous driving safer and more affordable.

Relying on a single monocular camera, game-changing system MonoFG has state of the art accuracy and, at about $300 per unit, could lower the cost of autonomous cars by thousands of dollars.

Just as humans perceive and judge depth while moving, MonoFG, improves how self-driving vehicles detect and navigate complex environments by accurately distinguishing between foreground and background.

Until now autonomous driving technology has been prohibitively expensive and would require laser-pulsing LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) sensors and cameras to create a 3D map of the surroundings.

The Honda Legend Hybrid EX, the world's first production car with Level 3 autonomous driving technology, was launched in 2021 and cost about AUD $102,000 (11 million yen).

A LiDAR system can cost up to $75,000, meaning MonoFG technology could bring autonomous driving within a family budget.

"It would be cheaper than a Land Cruiser," ACU Associate Professor Walayat Hussain said.

"This isn't just a concept-MonoFG has been tested on real-world datasets, proving that affordable, AI-driven self-driving technology is within reach."

The AI system behind the camera technology was designed by Assoc Prof Hussain and researchers from Shanghai University and Xidian University in China.

Published research showed extensive testing has validated MonoFG's capability to balance real-time decision-making with the ability to distinguish between foreground and background.

Its accuracy is comparable with LiDAR-supported models and was ranked No.1 for cyclist detection.

In terms of speed, MonoFG runs at 18 frames-per-second, making it virtually real time. It processes a new image even faster than an Olympic 100m sprinter whose average reaction time is about 0.16 seconds.

"With better accuracy in detecting pedestrians, cyclists, and other vehicles, this human-first AI reduces accident risks and increases public trust in self-driving technology," Assoc Prof Hussain said.

"Real-world testing shows that MonoFG enhances road safety by enabling smarter, real-time decision-making."

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