“Automotive System Design” by Sugako Otani, PhD, System and Processor Architect, Renesas Electronics Corporation, Kodaira, Japan. An IEEE SSCS Distinguished Lecturer.
Date: October 14, 2024 (Monday)
Time: 18:30 – 19:30 (UTC+8)
Mode: Hybrid
Venue: PSDC, 1 Jalan Sultan Azlan Shah, 11900 Bayan Lepas, Penang, Malaysia
Google Meet: https://meet.google.com/zxi-gqcp-tff
RSVP: https://forms.gle/atA9ve5xnNfT53Ni6
All are cordially invited to attend. Admission is FREE. Refreshments will be served from 18:00. Network and interact with like-minded engineers and researchers before the seminar begins. e-Certificates of Attendance will be issued to registered attendees. Pending CPD approval from the Malaysia Board of Technologists.
Abstract
The automotive industry is in the midst of a significant transformation. “CASE: Connected, Autonomous, Shared & Service, Electric” has been advocated as a trend. Along with this trend, automotive E/E (Electrical/Electronic) architecture will evolve from the current distributed architecture to a domain architecture and then to the future zone architecture in the autonomous driving era. The lecture introduces the requirement of automotive system design for in-vehicle devices and their key technologies, including processors for the infotainment system and advanced vehicle control. The lecture also covers automotive functional safety.
Speaker
Sugako Otani, is a system and processor architect at Renesas Electronics Corporation, Japan. Her current research focuses on application-specific architectures, ranging from IoT devices to automotive. She joined Mitsubishi Electric Corporation, Japan, in 1995 after receiving an M.S. in physics from Waseda University, Tokyo. She received a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from Kanazawa University in 2015. From 2005 to 2006, she was a Visiting Scholar at Stanford University. She is a committee member of ISSCC, VLSI Symposium, and ESSERC. She is 2025 Program Chair for VLSI Symposium. Since 2019, she has been a Visiting Associate Professor at Nagoya University, Japan.