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New Google Patents For Waymo's Robotaxi Senses, and what they reveal

This storyline collects Waymo patents on sensing and prediction: hearing sirens through microphones, adapting lidar to fog, spotting hidden pedestrians and wobbly cyclists, and filtering out glare from reflective signs. Together they show Waymo building layered awareness so its robotaxis can react before a hazard becomes visible.

40 filings · tracking since Apr 2026 · latest May 2026 · updates automatically as new filings publish

May 2026

Jul 2026

Jun 2026

US 2026/0181274 A1

New Patent Cuts Camera Lag in Self-Driving Cars

After building a car that listens and predicts, Waymo now sharpens what it actually sees: a camera that locks exposure faster than human eyes adjust to sudden light changes.

May 2026

US 2026/0147122 A1

LiDAR Background Imaging Fills Gaps in Vehicle Range Data

A robotaxi that sees dead zones around it would gain confidence in murky conditions. This filing shows how to convert wasted sensor data, light the LiDAR already captures but ignores, into a makeshift map of whatever its main laser pulses miss.

US 2026/0145703 A1

Waymo Patents a Self-Navigating Depot Check-In System for Robotaxis

After showing how robotaxis sense hazards on the road, Waymo now maps what happens when they leave it. This patent puts the vehicle itself in charge of finding the right maintenance bay, turning depot logistics into a navigation problem the car solves solo.

US 2026/0140505 A1

New Waymo Patent Sends Robotaxis on Targeted Data Hunts

A robotaxi that learns from rare edge cases needs exposure to them. This filing shows how Waymo routes its fleet to deliberately seek out the specific scenarios its system still struggles with, rather than hoping chance encounters provide enough training data.

Apr 2026

What the filings show

A good chunk of these filings deal with raw sensing. Waymo patents lidar that adjusts to fog in real time, a hybrid lidar that separates speed from distance when several objects overlap, and a lidar filter that screens out blinding retroreflectors from road signs and bike reflectors. A microphone system teaches the car to hear an ambulance before a camera spots one. On the software side, a transformer-based model builds navigation maps and a vision-language model lets different car systems ask questions about what is happening on the road ahead.

Another cluster targets prediction. One patent guesses where a hidden pedestrian might step out from behind a parked bus. Another watches for cyclists about to lose their balance. A separate system predicts crashes between two other vehicles, not just the ones involving the robotaxi itself. Waymo also patents a machine learning system for judging lane changes and a real time acceleration envelope for deciding how hard the car can brake or speed up. A targeted data collection patent sends cars out to hunt for the situations these models need to learn from.

Read together, the filings point to Waymo pairing better sensors with models that guess intent, not just detect objects. The recurring theme is anticipation: hearing sirens early, reading fog, guessing a pedestrian's next step, judging a cyclist's balance. Readers should watch for patents that stitch these pieces together, letting the car's perception, prediction, and driving decisions run off shared models. As always, a patent filing shows where Waymo's engineers are experimenting, not what will ship in a production robotaxi.

Questions readers ask

What does this Waymo patent storyline actually track?

It follows Waymo patent filings about how its self-driving cars sense the world and predict what people and other vehicles might do next, from hearing sirens and reading fog to guessing when a hidden pedestrian or wobbly cyclist could move into the road.

Do these patents mean Waymo robotaxis already hear sirens or see through fog today?

Not necessarily. A patent shows a system Waymo has designed and filed for legal protection, which points to research direction. It does not confirm the feature is running in current robotaxis on public roads.

Why do so many filings focus on predicting what other road users will do?

Several patents in this storyline model hidden pedestrians, cyclists losing balance, and crashes between other vehicles. That pattern suggests Waymo is spending real engineering effort on anticipating danger before it happens, not just reacting to what a sensor sees at that moment.

How is this different from a typical self-driving sensor patent?

Many filings here combine sensing with judgment, like a lidar that adapts to fog or filters reflective glare, paired with models that decide what a lane change, an acceleration, or a stranger's next move should look like, rather than covering hardware alone.

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