Google · Filed Dec 23, 2025 · Published May 7, 2026 · verified — real USPTO data

Waymo Patents a Microphone System That Lets Robotaxis Hear Sirens Coming

Waymo is patenting a way for its self-driving cars to hear an ambulance coming before any camera can see it — then react immediately, without waiting for visual confirmation.

Waymo Patent: Microphones Help Self-Driving Cars Hear Sirens — figure from US 2026/0129360 A1
FIG. 1A — rendered from the official USPTO publication PDF.
Publication number US 2026/0129360 A1
Applicant Waymo LLC
Filing date Dec 23, 2025
Publication date May 7, 2026
Inventors Cheng-Han Wu, Choon Ping Chng, Jun Hou, Miklos Szentkiralyi, Rutvik Acharya
CPC classification 381/86
Grant likelihood Medium
Examiner CENTRAL, DOCKET (Art Unit OPAP)
Status Docketed New Case - Ready for Examination (Feb 1, 2026)
Parent application is a Continuation of 18530439 (filed 2023-12-06)
Document 20 claims

How Waymo's robotaxi listens for emergency vehicles

Imagine an ambulance racing through an intersection two blocks away. A human driver hears the siren and starts slowing down or pulling over well before the flashing lights come into view. Most self-driving cars today rely almost entirely on cameras and lidar, meaning they only react once an emergency vehicle is visible — which could mean precious seconds lost.

Waymo's new patent describes a sensor module that sits on the roof of an autonomous vehicle and includes multiple external microphones — one facing front, one facing each side. Together, they let the car triangulate the direction a siren is coming from and flag it as a priority vehicle before any camera has seen it.

Once the system identifies the audio signature and figures out which direction the emergency vehicle is approaching from, it can trigger a control maneuver — like pulling right or slowing down — proactively. That's a meaningful upgrade over waiting for visual confirmation, especially in dense urban traffic where sightlines are short.

How the microphone array pinpoints siren direction

The patent describes a sensor module designed to mount on a vehicle's roof. It houses the usual suite of autonomous vehicle sensors (cameras, lidar, radar) but adds three dedicated external microphones:

  • A front microphone positioned near the front edge of the module
  • A side microphone extending into one lateral side of the module
  • An opposite-side microphone extending into the other lateral side

The spatial separation between microphones allows the system to perform audio source localization — basically, figuring out which direction a sound is coming from by comparing the tiny timing differences in when each microphone picks up the signal. This is the same principle behind how your two ears let your brain figure out if a car honk came from your left or right.

The first independent claim goes further: it describes a full control loop. The vehicle's computing system receives the audio data, analyzes it to find a signature matching a priority vehicle (sirens, horns), determines the approach direction, and then — critically — initiates a driving maneuver before the camera system has visually confirmed the source. That "prior to visually identifying" clause is the key technical claim, establishing that audio acts as an early-warning trigger rather than just a redundant confirmation signal.

Why hearing before seeing changes AV safety calculus

Regulatory frameworks and public trust in autonomous vehicles hinge on how they handle edge cases like emergency vehicle interactions. A robotaxi that hesitates at an intersection because it hasn't yet seen a siren-emitting ambulance is a real liability — legally and physically. By making audio a first-class sensing input that can trigger maneuvers independently, Waymo is building in a response layer that mirrors how experienced human drivers actually behave.

This also signals something broader about Waymo's sensor philosophy: the company is clearly not satisfied with cameras and lidar alone. Adding directional audio gives the vehicle a sense that works around corners, through fog, and in scenarios where line-of-sight fails. For you as a pedestrian or passenger, that's a meaningful safety increment — even if it never makes headlines.

Editorial take

This is genuinely thoughtful safety engineering, not a paper patent. The specific claim that the system acts *before* visual confirmation is the crux — it reframes audio as a predictive input rather than a backup check. Waymo is one of very few AV companies with enough real-world miles to know exactly where sensor-only approaches fall short, and this patent reads like it came from hard-won operational experience.

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Source. Full patent text and figures from the official USPTO publication PDF.

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