Applied Intuition extends Self-Driving System to Japan
Applied Intuition has expanded its Self-Driving System (SDS) to Japan, targeting the country's demanding road conditions and high quality standards.
Under 1 year
What Happened
Applied Intuition announced the expansion of its Self-Driving System (SDS) to Japan, less than a year after launching in North America and Europe. Japan's dense urban corridors, multi-exit intersections, and left-hand traffic patterns create a demanding environment for autonomous driving. The company has already invested in local engineering teams and data infrastructure, working with manufacturers like Isuzu Motors.
“Launching SDS in Japan marks a major milestone that reflects the remarkable pace at which we're advancing production and deployment of autonomous driving.”
SDS uses an end-to-end autonomy stack powered by neural networks trained on real-world and synthetic data. It supports advanced driver-assistance features like intelligent parking, active safety, and point-to-point urban driving, with a path toward L3 and L4 capabilities. The platform is designed to adapt to different vehicle architectures and compute platforms, including passively-cooled NVIDIA DRIVE systems.
The expansion reflects Applied Intuition's goal of building a globally scalable self-driving platform that can support automakers across regions, regulations, and driving environments. The company believes that the future of vehicle intelligence will be built on platforms that can learn, adapt, and scale globally.
Why this matters
Japan's complex urban roads, left-hand traffic, and strict regulations present unique challenges for autonomy. This expansion shows how SDS can adapt to global markets while maintaining safety and performance.
Terms in This Story
- SDS
- Self-Driving System — a platform for advanced driver-assistance and autonomous driving capabilities.
- ADAS
- Advanced Driver-Assistance Systems — technologies that help drivers with tasks like parking, lane keeping, and collision avoidance.
- L3 and L4 autonomy
- Level 3 and Level 4 autonomous driving — where the vehicle can handle most driving tasks under specific conditions (L3) or fully in defined areas (L4).
- OEM
- Original Equipment Manufacturer — a company that produces parts or vehicles, often for resale by another company.
Summarised from the linked release; details can be imperfect — always verify against the original source.