StradVision said its SVNet vision perception software is gaining momentum in China as automakers and suppliers accelerate development of advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) for next-generation vehicles.
The company said the artificial intelligence-based perception platform is being adopted across China’s automotive ecosystem, including original equipment manufacturers, tier-one suppliers and system-on-chip developers.
StradVision described SVNet as a lightweight perception software stack designed to meet cost, performance and integration requirements for large-scale vehicle production. The company said the platform’s flexibility allows it to be adapted across different vehicle models, sensor configurations and regulatory environments.
China has become one of the fastest-moving markets for software-defined vehicles, with development programs progressing quickly from testing to production and increasingly targeting global markets.
StradVision said its regional expansion is supported by a partnership with semiconductor company Axera. The collaboration integrates SVNet with Axera’s M57 series platform to create a combined hardware and software solution aimed at scalable ADAS deployments.
The company said the joint offering allows automakers and suppliers to implement perception technology at price levels suitable for high-volume vehicle platforms.
Philip Vidal, chief business officer of StradVision, said the Chinese automotive sector is playing an increasingly important role in the company’s global strategy.
“China is a strategic growth engine for StradVision, not only because of its scale, but because of how quickly the market is setting the pace for production execution,” Vidal said. “We are building durable momentum in the region by delivering proven perception performance, faster integration cycles, and a partnership model that helps our customers move confidently from development into mass production.”
StradVision added that many Chinese automakers are prioritizing perception technologies that can be deployed across multiple vehicle platforms as they expand into international markets.
