in

A look into HORIBA MIRA and Coventry University’s autonomous vehicle centre

A look into HORIBA MIRA and Coventry University’s autonomous vehicle centre

As HORIBA MIRA celebrates three years since the launch of the Centre for Connected and Autonomous Automotive Research (CCAAR) partnership with Coventry University, SMART Highways reporter Emma Greedy spoke to Research & Future Transport Technologies Manager at MIRA, Anthony Baxendale.

Global engineering consultancy HORIBA MIRA began a partnership with Coventry University in July 2016 to open the automotive research centre at the MIRA Technology Park in Nuneaton. CCAAR was created to provide an environment to simulate, test and evaluate the security and safety of Connected Autonomous Vehicles (CAV).

Anthony Baxendale said that MIRA’s partnership with Coventry University is ‘a key part of how the company innovate quickly.’ Whilst MIRA has collaborated with various universities over the years, Baxendale said that the company felt that Coventry’s culture, as well as the fact that it’s local, all helped to recognise that this collaboration could produce great results.

Bright young minds as well as inquisitive university culture is what MIRA feels makes for new ideas within the automotive industry. ‘Disruptive ideas that maybe engineers, like ourselves, can’t come up with can come from university students. We can then implement them, so if you can bring the two together, that’s a great incentive for a collaboration,’ said Baxendale.

As well as developing intelligent, connected vehicle technology, CCAAR was created to provide an environment to simulate, test and evaluate the security and safety of Connected Autonomous Vehicles. ‘The PHD students that we had and still have working on the security and safety simulation within CCAAR are able to help us introduce new approaches for testing and simulation,’ Baxendale said. From the simulation development, MIRA has been able to support the Trusted Intelligent Connected Autonomous Vehicle consortium, known as TIC-IT. The project intends to create a purpose built, safe environment for testing CAVs up to the limit of their controllability.

‘TIC-IT is a new test environment which is due to be constructed towards the end of next. I think it’s a great example of how university and a company like ours can really make a partnership more significant than an individual organisation,’ Baxendale suggested.

In terms of future CAV projects, Baxendale said that the sorts of areas that MIRA would like to look at next would be mixed reality. ‘We think that a mixture of virtual reality and physical simulation could be important when looking at automated vehicles. How people interact with automation needs to be researched and tested. And I think another area would be the hurdles that still need to be overcome with level three autonomy, which is what we’re getting close to, and what happens when a vehicle hands back control to the driver,’ said Baxendale.

Both projects that MIRA are working on are part of Testbed UK led by the Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CCAV) and Zenzic the self-driving UK hub organisation, which was created by Government and industry to accelerate the self-driving revolution in the UK.

Report

What do you think?

486 Points
Upvote Downvote

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Queensland launches “most advanced” autonomous vehicle trial using Renault Zoe

Queensland launches “most advanced” autonomous vehicle trial using Renault Zoe

Jaywalking could jam up era of self-driving cars

Jaywalking could jam up era of self-driving cars