Must-See Sessions at AutoSens USA 2026

Industry experts in ADAS, automotive perception and sensing technologies, will take to the AutoSens USA 2026 stage again this June to deliver technical presentations.

Whether you want to learn more about Emerging Technologies, Image Sensors, Virtual Testing Environments, AI, Safety, Lenses, Security, or other crucial industry topics, our technical agenda covers it all!

Tutorial:
Using Sensors for ODD Awareness and Anticipation

Tuesday 9th June  |  1:30pm EDT  |  Room 140A/B

 
 

Prof. Valentina Donzella, Professor, Sensors and Perception for Intelligent System

QMUL logo

Valentina Donzella
AutoSens Keynote:
What are the hot areas for Investments and M&A in Automotive Perception

Wednesday 10th June  |  12:50pm EDT  |  AutoSens Exhibition Stage

 

 

Rudy Burger

Managing Partner

Woodside Capital Partners

As the automotive industry transitions toward software-defined vehicles and higher-level autonomy, the investment landscape for perception technology is shifting from basic sensing to solving complex edge cases. 

This session explores high-conviction M&A drivers and investment themes, moving beyond traditional hardware debates to analyze the next frontiers of value creation: imaging radar, thermal sensing for all-weather reliability, and AI-driven software layers.

See the full description for Rudy’s session here. 

Anatomy of a Perception Focused Camera Pipeline

Wednesday 10th June  |  2:45pm EDT  | AS Exhibition Stage 

Dhruv Lamba

 

Dhruv Lamba

Staff Sensor Hardware Engineer

Kodiak

ADAS in the Physical AI Era: Architecture Shifts and Supply-Chain Power Moves

Thursday 11th June  |  11:25am EDT  | AS Exhibition Stage 

Pierrick Boulay

 

Pierrick Boulay

Principal Analyst

Yole Intelligence

AutoSens Keynote Panel: Architecture Shifts: Collapsing ECUs for Scalable Sensing & Compute

Wednesday 10th June  |  12:05pm EDT  |  AutoSens Exhibition Stage

Juergen Hoellisch

 

MODERATOR

Juergen Hoellisch

CEO

Hoellisch Consulting

Daniel Cashen

 

Daniel Cashen

Chief Engineer

Stellantis

Auston Payyippally

 

Auston Payyappilly

Director of Product Management & Acquisitions – ADAS & Cockpit Domain Computers

Bosch

Georg Olma

 

Georg Olma

Sr. Director Automotive Solutions

NXP

Geir Ostrem

 

Geir Ostrem

Managing Director, Automotive Systems and Technology

Analog Devices 1

As vehicle intelligence scales, traditional ECU-centric architectures are being stretched to their limits. Growing sensor counts, higher data rates, and increasingly complex perception stacks are driving a fundamental shift toward more centralized and zonal architectures—where sensing, compute, and control are consolidated to reduce latency, cost, and system complexity. 

Find out more here.

Lenses for the Future!

Wednesday 10th June  |  5:05pm EDT  |  Room 140A/B

 

Bhagyashri Katti 1

 

Bhagyashri Katti

Senior Researcher – AI & ML

General Motors

Nithya Somanath

 

Nithya Somanath

Senior Researcher

General Motors

10BASE-T1S has emerged as the dominant technology to replace traditional multidrop networks paving the way towards IP-based converged in-vehicle communication. 

In a 10BASE-T1S system, nodes transmit in a cyclic pattern where each node transmits once per cycle and must wait for its opportunity to come in the next cycle resulting in higher latency. With increasing centralization in software defined vehicle (SDV) architectures, end to end latency becomes even more pronounced, making 10BASE-T1S performance a concern for low latency control applications. 

A common mitigation strategy is to limit the number of nodes on each segment, but this increases the number of 10BASE-T1S links, wiring cost and complexity. To address this challenge, we applied a set of latency optimization methods and demonstrated improvements in latency using a simulator.

Read more on Bhagyashri and Nithya’s presentation >>

High fidelity Camera Simulation to De-Risk AEB Under Difficult Lighting

Thursday 11th June  |  11:00am EDT  |  Room 140C/D

 

Claudia Zaragoza Martinez 1

 

Claudia Zaragoza -Martinez

Image Research Engineer

Ford Motor Company

LionelBennes Ansys

 

Lionel Bennes

Lead Product Manager

Synopsys logo

Upcoming AEB regulations—mandating deployment on all new U.S. light duty vehicles by September 2029—are redefining performance expectations for front camera sensing. 

Public safety demands increasingly focus on edge cases such as night time pedestrian detection with low beam headlights, low sun and headlight glare scenarios, and low contrast targets in complex lighting.  

These conditions are difficult to reproduce on proving grounds and too rare in public road testing to provide adequate statistical coverage, shifting AEB development challenges from control logic to perception robustness under optical and photometric stress. 

Read more on Claudia and Lionel’s presentation >>

OEM Panel Discussion: Validating AI at Scale

Wednesday 11th June  |  5:20pm EDT  |  AutoSens Exhibition Stage

Augustin Friedel

 

Augustin Friedel

Associated Partner

mhp logo

Dave Tokic

 

Dave Tokic

VP of Corporate Development

Torc

Venkat Adusumalli

 

Venkat Adusumalli

Software Engineering Manager

Stellantis

Praneeth Nelapati

 

Praneeth Nelapati

Tech Specialist ADAS/AV Sensors

General Motors

The automotive industry is not immune to the AI revolution, and as AI becomes central to perception and decision-making, validating its performance at scale remains one of the most complex challenges facing OEMs. Traditional validation methods struggle to keep pace with the non-deterministic nature of AI systems, the long tail of edge cases, and the sheer volume of scenarios required to build confidence in real-world deployment. 

Find out more here.

Evolving Functional Safety for Centralized and Software-Defined Vehicle Architectures

Thursday 11th June  |  11:25am EDT  |  Room 140A/B

 

Ramachandra Vannala

 

Ramachandra Vannala  

Sr. Staff Functional Safety Engineer  

3004cc5d ce6b 44f9 8865 a4221114bbc7 company logo test Rivian and Volkswagen Group Technologies 918e18

 

Modern vehicles are rapidly transitioning toward centralized and software-defined architectures, enabled by high-performance computing and continuous software updates. While these advances unlock new capabilities, they also introduce fundamental safety challenges, as traditional Functional Safety (FuSa) practices were originally developed for static, hardware-centric systems. 

Find out more about Ramachandra’s session >>

Interested in in-cabin monitoring technology?

With a pass to AutoSens USA, you’ll also get full access to our co-located sister event, InCabin. Take a look at the full agenda for InCabin here >>

InCabin Logo
What can you expect at AutoSens USA 2026? Check it out below ⬇

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