Detalhes do Documento

Security first, safety next: the next-generation embedded sensors for autonomous vehicles

Autor(es): Cunha, Luís ; Sousa, João ; Azevedo, José ; Pinto, Sandro ; Gomes, Tiago

Data: 2025

Identificador Persistente: https://hdl.handle.net/1822/96471

Origem: RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho

Assunto(s): Autonomous driving; Driver-less systems; X-by-wire; Security; Safety


Descrição

The automotive industry is fully shifting towards autonomous connected vehicles. By advancing vehicles’ intelligence and connectivity, the industry has enabled innovative functions such as advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) in the direction of driverless cars. Such functions are often referred to as cyber-physical features, since almost all of them require collecting data from the physical environment to make automotive operation decisions and properly actuate in the physical world. However, increased functionalities result in increased complexity, which causes serious security vulnerabilities that are typically a result of mushrooming functionality and hence complexity. In a world where we keep seeing traditional mechanical systems shifting to x-by-wire solutions, the number of connected sensors, processing systems, and communication buses inside the car exponentially increases, raising several safety and security concerns. Because there is no safety without security, car manufacturers start struggling in making lightweight sensor and processing systems while keeping the security aspects a major priority. This article surveys the current technological challenges in securing autonomous vehicles and contributes a cross-layer analysis bridging hardware security primitives, real-world sidechannel threats, and redundancy-based fault tolerance in automotive electronic control units (ECUs). It combines architectural insights with an evaluation of commercial support for TrustZone, trusted platform modules (TPMs), and lockstep platforms, offering both academic and industry audiences a grounded perspective on gaps in current hardware capabilities. Finally, it outlines future directions and presents a forward-looking vision for securing sensors and processing systems in the path toward fully safe and connected autonomous vehicles.

Tipo de Documento Artigo científico
Idioma Inglês
Contribuidor(es) Universidade do Minho
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