Join this intimate and specialized meeting where researchers, scientists, engineers, and product developers converge to discuss important and ongoing research in the field of sensor systems, related technologies, and specialized application areas.
Sensors are integral components of modern infrastructure, scientific research, and transportation systems. Bridges, buildings, vehicles, and other devices now depend on complex sensing and imaging systems to relay information and interact with the world. Autonomous vehicles rely on a multi-sensor suite to safely navigate a vehicle through urban and rural areas in a variety of weather conditions. Sensor systems are also critical for environmental monitoring and to help protect human health and safety. These expanding fields require ongoing collaboration between researchers, government agencies, and industry companies as these sensors and their relevant data products evolve.
In order to keep up with the latest techniques and application areas, Future Sensing Technologies will cover topics that are especially significant to the industry today. The program is designed to give high-value technical content and research exchange. If you are working in the industry and have information to share, please submit your abstract and plan to join us in Yokohama.
Kobe Univ. (Japan)
Montana State Univ. (United States)
Georgia Tech Research Institute (United States)
Joshua B. Broadwater, Johns Hopkins Univ. Applied Physics Lab., LLC (United States)
Nathan A. Hagen, Utsunomiya Univ. (Japan)
Hiroki Hihara, NEC Space Technologies, Ltd. (Japan)
Shinpei Ogawa, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. (Japan)
Silvia Serranti, Sapienza Univ. di Roma (Italy)
Review the list of available research across multiple years of SPIE Future Sensing Technologies. See what has been shared before.