OptiValue Tek has filed a patent for an artificial intelligence system focused on driver intelligence, predictive safety and autonomous mobility infrastructure. The filing expands the company's work in transport technology.
The proposed system would continuously monitor driver condition, detect vehicle events, analyse behavioural risk and manage emergency alerts. It is designed to operate within connected mobility networks that use software and data to interpret road conditions, driver behaviour and operational risk in real time.
The patent targets several parts of the transport market, including driver monitoring systems, connected vehicle and telematics platforms, usage-based insurance, autonomous vehicle safety systems, emergency response infrastructure and fleet management networks. OptiValue Tek also links the filing to its broader work in cybersecurity, cloud modernisation, intelligent automation, smart infrastructure and digital resilience.
The move comes as software plays a growing role in vehicle safety and transport operations. OptiValue Tek said the wider market for autonomous and connected mobility is projected to exceed USD $12 trillion by 2032.
Mobility focus
OptiValue Tek is developing what it describes as a framework that combines behavioural intelligence with live mobility data. In practice, that means a system that can assess a driver's condition, identify unusual events, flag elevated risk and trigger alerts when an emergency response may be needed.
These systems are attracting interest from carmakers, insurers, fleet operators and public authorities as transport networks become more data-driven. For insurers, behavioural analysis and faster incident reporting can support more precise risk assessment. Fleet operators can use similar data to monitor safety and vehicle use.
The filing also reflects the automotive sector's broader shift toward software-defined vehicles and autonomous transport systems. In that environment, companies are increasingly trying to build platforms that combine sensing, analytics and operational decision-making in a single system.
Ashish Kumar, Founder and Managing Director, OptiValue Tek, outlined the company's position on the filing.
"This patent represents a shift toward intelligent mobility ecosystems where AI, safety systems, and human behaviour work together in real time. The objective is not just monitoring, but building predictive and responsive mobility infrastructure capable of improving safety, strengthening operational trust, and supporting the future of autonomous transportation," said Kumar.
Insurance angle
The insurance sector is one of the clearest commercial targets for this type of technology. Usage-based insurance products already rely on telematics and driver data, and more advanced systems could allow insurers to assess behaviour and incident patterns in greater detail.
For fleet operators, the same approach can support route management, incident prevention and emergency handling. Emergency response systems may also benefit if vehicle data can be used to detect collisions or other critical events and send alerts more quickly.
The patent filing also supports OptiValue Tek's strategic focus on artificial intelligence-led products and services beyond transport. Its work spans technology consulting fields including cybersecurity, cloud systems, automation and infrastructure.
OptiValue Tek describes itself as a digital engineering and technology consulting group working with businesses, governments and growth companies. It positions the patent as part of a broader effort to expand its presence in mobility and transportation technology as spending rises across intelligent transport systems.
Across the sector, competition is increasing as technology firms, automotive suppliers and specialist software groups seek intellectual property tied to driver monitoring, safety analytics and autonomous systems. Patents in these areas can serve as both a defensive tool and a way to establish a position in emerging parts of the transport market.
Industry debate has increasingly moved beyond the vehicle itself to the surrounding systems, including communications networks, safety governance, analytics and how data is shared between transport stakeholders. OptiValue Tek's filing fits that trend by focusing not only on in-vehicle monitoring but also on the infrastructure needed to support connected and automated mobility.
The patent is intended to support a transport system in which artificial intelligence can assess driver behaviour, environmental conditions, operational risk and emergency scenarios in real time.