This is a list of Japanese inventions and discoveries . The Japanese have made contributions across a number of scientific, technological and art domains. In particular, the country has played a crucial role in the digital revolution since the 20th century, with many modern revolutionary and widespread technologies in fields such as electronics and robotics introduced by Japanese inventors and entrepreneurs.
Origami paper cranes (orizuru )
A kamishibaiya (kamishibai artist) in Tokyo performing Ōgon Bat (1930)
Katsudō Shashin (1907), the earliest anime .
The Dull Sword (1917), featuring the earliest animated fight scene .
Anime — Japanese animation known as anime began in the early 20th century. The earliest anime was the animated short Katsudō Shashin (1907).[ 14]
Bishōjo — Hayao Miyazaki 's female characters Lana from Future Boy Conan (1978) and Clarisse from The Castle of Cagliostro (1979) were early icons of the bishōjo boom.
Moe — The character of Clarisse from Miyazaki's The Castle of Cagliostro (1979) has been cited as a potential ancestral example.[ 18]
Bullet time — The bullet time visual effect originated as a cel animation effect in the anime series Speed Racer (1967).[ 19]
CGI animated feature film — Golgo 13: The Professional (1983) was the first animated feature film with computer-animated scenes.[ 20]
Cyberpunk animation — The earliest animated cyberpunk work was the original video animation (OVA) Megazone 23 (1985).[ 23]
Motion capture — The Japanese CGI short films Bio-Sensor (1984) and Nagisa no Peppy (1987) made early use of rudimentary motion capture, using profile and head-on films of a tiger walking.[ 21]
Multi-season story arc — 1980s Japanese anime series, notably Dragon Ball (1986) and Dragon Ball Z (1989), developed a TV serialization format where a continuous story arc stretches over numerous episodes or multiple seasons.[ 27]
Original net animation (ONA) — Makoto Shinkai was a pioneer of ONA, producing the earliest ONA short films with Tōi Sekai (1997) and Kakomareta Sekai (1998).[ 28]
Real robot — Mobile Suit Gundam (1979) introduced the real robot concept and, along with The Super Dimension Fortress Macross (1982), formed the basis of real robot anime.[ 30]
Steampunk animation — The earliest steampunk anime were Leiji Matsumoto 's Space Battleship Yamato (1974) and Hayao Miyazaki's Future Boy Conan (1978).[ 31]
Sweat drop — The sweat drop had long been part of manga iconography . The first animation to depict a large sweat drop, when a character is in trouble, is believed to be the 1991 anime adaptation of the manga Goldfish Warning! [ 33]
Time loop animation — Mamoru Oshii 's Urusei Yatsura 2: Beautiful Dreamer , produced in 1983 and released in 1984, was the first animated film about a time loop, predating Groundhog Day (1993).[ 34]
Video game film — The first video game film adaptations were the 1986 anime films Super Mario Bros: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen and Running Boy: Star Soldier no Himitsu .[ 35]
Virtual idol — Originates from Macross franchise (1982). First virtual idol was Lynn Minmay from Macross .[ 36]
Virtual influencer — The Japanese talent agency Horipro created the first real-life AI virtual influencer, Kyoko Date , in 1995.[ 37]
Hōryū-ji (607), the oldest wooden building with Earthquake resistance .
Nagoya Castle (1612), a Japanese castle .
Seven Samurai (1954), an influential samurai film directed by Akira Kurosawa .
Blockbuster format — Akira Kurosawa 's Japanese films , especially Seven Samurai (1954), were "the clearest precursor" and "model for" the Hollywood blockbuster format.[ 47]
Buddy cop — Akira Kurosawa 's Stray Dog (1949), starring Toshiro Mifune and Takashi Shimura as a police duo, was the earliest buddy cop film.[ 52]
Digital cinema — In 1992, Hughes-JVC was founded by JVC and Hughes Electronics to develop ILA (Image Light Amplifer) digital video projectors for commercial movie theaters using liquid crystal on silicon (LCOS) technology.[ 53]
Eastman Color Negative film — Jigokumon (1953) was the first color film shot using the Eastman Color Negative (ECN) format, with film processing by Imagica . It won the Palme d'Or at Cannes Film Festival .[ 55]
Fatality — Fatality finishing moves first appeared in The Street Fighter (1974), a Japanese martial arts film starring Sonny Chiba .[ 56]
Henshin Hero (transforming hero) — In 1957, Shintoho produced the first Super Giant film serial, signaling a shift in popularity that favored masked superheroes over giant monsters called the "Henshin Boom" later popularized by Kamen Rider (1971).[ 57]
IMAX film — Tiger Child (1970), the first IMAX film production, was produced by Japanese company Asuka Productions. It premiered at Expo '70 in Osaka at the Fuji Group Pavilion.[ 59]
Jidaigeki — Jidaigeki silent films date back to the early 20th century.[ 60]
Godzilla (1954), an early kaiju film directed by Ishirō Honda .
Hokusai Manga (early 19th century), an early manga comic book.
The Tale of Genji (11th century), an early novel.
Kaguya-hime returning to the Moon in The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter (10th century), an early Japanese science fiction story.
Sony Walkman TPS‑L2 (1979), the first personal stereo .
Automatic dual-side record player — In 1981, Sharp Corporation released the first record player that automatically switches sides of a vinyl record .[ 97]
Delta-sigma modulation (ΔΣ) — In 1962, ΔΣ digital sampling was defined and named in 1962 by University of Tokyo researchers H. Inose, Y. Yasuda and J. Murakami.[ 98]
Digital audio recorder — In 1967, Heitaro Nakajima of NHK began work on the digitization of sound. By 1969, he developed the first digital audio tape recorder.[ 99]
Digital optical audio disc — In 1976, Sony first demonstrated a digital audio optical disc . In 1978, they demonstrated a disc with 16-bit audio and 44,056 Hz sample rate .[ 99]
Electrostatic headphones — The Stax SR-1 were the first electrostatic headphones , developed between 1959 and 1960 by Stax Ltd. [ 104]
FET audio power amplifier — In 1974, Junichi Nishizawa introduced a power MOSFET used as an audio power amplifier .[ 107]
High-resolution audio — In 1972, Denon 's DN-023R digital audio recorder introduced a high-resolution 47.25 kHz sample rate .[ 100]
Home stereo system — In 1962, Pioneer Corporation introduced the world's first home stereo system with detachable speakers .[ 110]
Human voice synthesis — Early speech synthesis systems typically produced a low-quality robotic voice . In 1998, Toshiba introduced the first speech synthesis system that produced a high-quality human voice .[ 111]
Integrated amplifier — Sony 's TA-1120 (1965) was the first silicon transistor stereo integrated amplifier . Compared to vacuum tube amplifiers at the time, the TA-1120 offered higher output with lower distortion .[ 106]
Karaoke — In 1967, the first karaoke machine was invented by Japanese engineer Shigeichi Negishi .[ 112]
Linear predictive coding (LPC) — The origins of linear predictive coding (LPC) speech coding dates back to the work of Fumitada Itakura (Nagoya University ) and Shuzo Saito (Nippon Telegraph and Telephone ) in 1966.[ 113]
MPEG-1 Audio Layer II (MP2) — The MUSICAM (MP2) audio coding format was co-developed by Matsushita Electric in 1989.[ 114]
Paper audio record — In 1950, Yoshiro Nakamatsu invented the Jūshoku record , an optical sound media which uses a printed paper sheet instead of transparent film. He claimed it was an early floppy disk , which is disputed by IBM .[ 116]
Sony Discman D121, a portable CD player .
Roland TR-808 Rhythm Composer (1980), the first fully programmable drum machine .
Yamaha DX7 (1983), an early digital synthesizer with FM synthesis .
Digital synthesizer (FM synthesizer ) — In 1974, Yamaha developed the first prototype digital synthesizer with frequency modulation synthesis (FM synthesis).[ 136]
Direct-drive turntable — Technics SP-10 (1969), invented by Shuichi Obata at Matsushita Electric , was the first direct-drive turntable . It was used by DJs for turntablism .[ 139]
Electronic drum — Ikutaro Kakehashi developed the first fully transistorized electronic drum instrument, the R1 Rhythm Ace, exhibited in 1964. It was manually hand-operated like modern electronic drum pads .[ 125]
Guitar synthesizer — The Roland GR-500 (1977), manufactured by Roland Corporation and FujiGen , was the first guitar synthesizer.[ 142]
Handheld electronic tuner — Korg 's WT10 (1975) was the first battery-powered handheld electronic tuner .[ 145]
Microprocessor music sequencer — The Roland MC-8 Microcomposer (1977) was the first microprocessor‑based music sequencer.[ 125]
Microprocessor programmable drum machine — In 1978, the Roland CR-78 and CR-68 were the first microprocessor ‑based programmable rhythm machines .[ 142]
MIDI — In 1981, Roland founder Ikutaro Kakehashi proposed a standardized means of synchronizing electronic music instruments . Roland, Yamaha, Korg and Kawai co-developed the MIDI standard between 1981 and 1983.[ 125]
MIDI digital audio workstation (DAW) — Yamaha's MSX personal computers Yamaha Integrated System (YIS) and Yamaha CX5M , developed between 1981 and 1983, were the first MIDI-equipped music workstations.[ 152]
Music computer — Yamaha's MSX computers , Yamaha Integrated System (YIS) and Yamaha CX5M developed between 1981 and 1983, were the first dedicated music home computers .[ 152]
Music Macro Language (MML) — The first commands for classical MML appeared on the Sharp MZ-80K (1978) computer.[ 153]
PCM digital sampler — Toshiba 's LMD-649 (1981) was an early digital sampler that played and recorded PCM samples .[ 154]
Phaser effects pedal — In 1968, Shin-ei's Uni-Vibe effects pedal , designed by audio engineer Fumio Mieda, incorporated phase shift and chorus effects, soon becoming favorite effects of guitarists such as Jimi Hendrix and Robin Trower .[ 156]
Physical modelling synthesis — The Yamaha VL‑1 (1994) was the first commercial physical modelling synthesizer.[ 157]
Polyphonic synthesizer with digital keyboard scanning — In the early 1970s, Yamaha developed polyphonic synthesizers with voice allocation technology and digital keyboard scanning . The Yamaha GX-1 (1973) used voice allocation technology.[ 136]
Singing voice synthesis software — Between 1999 and 2003, Yamaha developed Vocaloid , a then novel software that synthesized a singing human voice .[ 159]
Sound chip — The earliest was Sony 's PCM-1 , a pulse-code modulation (PCM) processor introduced in 1976.[ 99]
Sound module — The Roland SPV355 Pitch‑to‑Voltage Synthesizer (1979) was the earliest rack-mounted sound module.[ 163]
Touch-sensitive electronic keyboard — The Roland EP-30 (1974) electronic piano featured the first touch-sensitive keyboard.[ 142]
Vowel–consonant synthesis — A type of hybrid digital -analog synthesis first employed by the early Casiotone keyboards in the early 1980s.
Yellow Magic Orchestra (YMO) in 1981: Haruomi Hosono (left), Ryuichi Sakamoto (center) and Yukihiro Takahashi (right).
Isao Tomita in 1977.
Minolta Disc-7 (1983), the first selfie camera .
3D holographic stereo camera — In 1968, Konishiroku (Konica) invented the first holographic 3D camera, using holographic multi-lens stereogram technology.[ 193]
Action camera (body camera) — The first action camera was the Canon CI-10 (1985) by Canon Inc. [ 194]
Autofocus camera (AF camera) — The Konica C35 AF (1977) was the first camera with autofocus (AF).[ 195]
Bayonet lens mount — The Nikon F-mount , debuted with the Nikon F (1959), was the first interchangeable lens bayonet mount .[ 195]
Bridge camera — In early 1988, the first bridge cameras were the Ricoh FF-7, Kyocera 's Samurai, Olympus Corporation 's Infinity SuperZoom 300, and the Chinon Genesis .[ 199]
CdS meter — In 1962, the Taron Marquis from Japan was the first camera with built-in cadmium sulfide (CdS) light meter , shortly followed by the Minolta SR-7 .[ 200]
Depth of field (DOF) — The Nikon F (1959) introduced a DOF preview button.[ 198]
Electronic memory — The Asahi Pentax Electro Spotmatic (ES), released in 1971, introduced the use of electronic memory in a camera.[ 202]
Event camera — The development of silicon retina event cameras dates back to Kunihiko Fukushima 's Reticon in 1989.[ 203]
Fisheye lens for 35 mm camera — In 1962, Nikon introduced the first regular production fisheye lens for 35 mm cameras.[ 204]
Flash synchronization (flash sync) — The Mamiyaflex (1948) by Mamiya was the first twin-lens reflex (TLR) camera with flash sync.[ 200]
Instant return mirror — The Asahiflex IIB (1954) was the first single-lens reflex (SLR) camera with a practical instant return mirror.[ 206]
Integrated circuit camera — Nikon's Nikkormat EL (1972) was the first camera with a monolithic integrated circuit (IC) chip.[ 198]
Metal-bladed focal-plane shutter — The Konica F (1960) introduced a new metal-bladed focal-plane shutter designed and manufactured by Konishiroku , which they branded the Hi Synchro.[ 207]
Multi-layer optical coating — The first multi-layer lens coating was the "Super-Multi-Coating" introduced by Pentax in the 1950s.[ 206]
Point-and-shoot 35 mm camera — The Konica C35 AF (1977) and Canon AF35M Sure Shot (1979) were the first 35 mm point‑and-shoot electronic cameras .[ 208]
Selfie camera — The Minolta Disc-7 (1983) was the first camera with a selfie mirror on its front for shooting selfie photos.[ 210]
Selfie stick — Invented for the Minolta Disc-7 (1983), where package showed the camera mounted on a selfie stick.[ 210]
Shutter priority auto-exposure — The Konica Autoreflex (1965) was the first SLR camera with shutter priority auto‑exposure.[ 200]
Aperture priority — The Asahi Pentax ES (1971) was the first SLR camera with aperture priority auto-exposure.[ 206]
Single-lens reflex system camera (system SLR) — The Nikon F (1959) was the first SLR system camera.[ 195]
Superzoom — The Nikon Super Zoom-8 (1966) introduced 5× zoom lens . The Nikon 8X Super Zoom (1967) introduced 8× zoom. The Nikon R10 Super Zoom (1973) introduced 10× zoom.[ 198]
Through-the-lens metering (TTL) — The first camera to feature TTL light metering was by Japanese company Nikon , with a prototype rangefinder camera , the SPX, in 1950.[ 211]
Vibration reduction (VR) — The Nikon Zoom 700VR (1994) was the first camera featuring optical vibration reduction.[ 198]
Viewfinder digital display — Fujifilm's Fujica ST 801 (1972) was the first SLR camera with a viewfinder incorporating digital LED display .[ 200]
Weather-proof camera — The Olympus AF-1 Nuretemo-Pikaso (Wet Flash), released in 1986, was the first weather‑proof compact camera .[ 212]
Nikon QV-1000C (1988), the first commercial digital SLR (DSLR) camera.
Sony 's Betamovie BMC-110 (1983), the first consumer camcorder .
Color home video camera — In 1973, Toshiba released the first color video camera for home use.[ 111]
Digital video camera — In 1986, Sony developed a prototype digital video camera that recorded digital video on D-1 (Sony) video cassettes .[ 227]
DSLR video camera — The Nikon D90 (2008) was the DSLR camera capable of video recording.[ 195]
Handheld TV camera — Ikegami Tsushinki introduced the first portable 4+ 1 ⁄2 -inch Image Orthicon tube hand-held TV camera. The camera made its US debut in February 1962.[ 230]
HD video CCD camera (HD CCD) — In the 1980s, prototype HD CCD cameras were developed by Fujitsu , Ikegami Tsushinki , Matsushita Electric , NEC , Sanyo , Sharp Corporation , Sony, Toshiba and JVC .[ 232]
High-speed camera — Between 1974 and 1975, NHK developed a Saticon video camera capable of high frame rates above the 60 Hz NTSC standard, reaching up to 500 Hz frame rate.[ 233]
Image stabilization — Panasonic invented optical image stabilization (OIS) for the PV-460 (1988) video camera.[ 234]
MPEG video camera — The Hitachi MP-EG1 (1996) digital camera introduced MPEG-1 support. Sharp Corporation 's VN-EZ1 Internet ViewCam (1999) camera introduced MPEG-4 support.[ 194]
Still video camera (SVC) — The first prototype SVC to be developed was the SV Camera (1977) by Canon Inc. The first SVC to be demonstrated was the Sony Mavica (1981).[ 235]
Fujitsu FM-8 (1981) computer keyboard with arrow keys .
Artificial intelligence [ edit ]
Sega AI Computer (1986), the earliest home computer designed for AI .
Object detection using a convolutional neural network (CNN) deep learning model
Casio electronic pocket calculator with seven-segment liquid-crystal display (LCD)
Casio fx-7000G (1985), the first scientific graphing calculator .
Epson HX-20 , introduced in 1981 and released in 1982, was the first laptop computer.
Sord M223 Mark III, an early home computer released by Sord Computer Corporation in the late 1970s.
Microcomputer — The Sord SMP80/08, developed by Sord Computer Corporation from 1972 to early 1973, was an early microcomputer, using the Intel 8008 microprocessor .[ 280]
Notebook computer — Yukio Yokozawa, working for Suwa Seikosha (Seiko Epson ), invented the first notebook computer in July 1980, introduced as Epson HX-20 in 1981.[ 283]
Personal computer with hard disk drive — The Sord M223 Mark VI came with a built-in hard disk drive in 1979.[ 280]
Petascale computing — The RIKEN MDGRAPE-3 , developed by Riken between 2003 and 2006, was the first supercomputer to achieve PetaFLOPS (PFLOPS) performance with 1 quadrillion floating point operations per second (FLOPS).[ 285]
Standardized computer architecture — The first attempt at a standardized computer architecture was the MSX , introduced by ASCII Corporation and Microsoft Japan in 1983.[ 287]
Stored-program transistor computer — Electrotechnical Laboratory 's ETL Mark III, which began development in 1954 and was completed in 1956, was the first stored-program transistor computer.[ 289]
2.5D parallax scrolling of city buildings
A cel shader , also known as toon shader.
Cel shading (toon shading) — First appeared in Riverhillsoft 's video game Doctor Hauzer (1994).[ 297]
Computer graphics raster display CRT monitor — In the 1960s, Hitachi developed a raster scan CRT computer monitor to display raster graphics on computer terminals .[ 268]
Digital Visual Interface (DVI) — Developed in 1999 by the Digital Display Working Group (DDWG), which included Japanese companies Fujitsu and NEC .[ 300]
Flat-panel computer display — The Sharp PC-1211 (1980) pocket computer was the first computer with flat-panel liquid-crystal display (LCD).[ 265]
Frame memory — Between 1964 and 1969, NHK STRL developed a prototype 1125i Hi-Vision analog HDTV system which used a minicomputer with 20 megabyte (MB) frame memory disk storage to store images .[ 233]
Graphics processing unit (GPU) — The Fujitsu MB14241, used in arcade video games such as Gun Fight (1975) and Space Invaders (1978), is considered the first GPU. The NEC μPD7220 (1981) was the first large-scale integration (LSI) GPU.[ 303]
High color — The Sega Super Scaler (1985) arcade board had a 16-bit color palette (65,536 colors).[ 307]
High-dynamic-range rendering (HDR rendering) — In 1990, Hiroshima University researchers presented a lighting model for driving simulators that demonstrated high dynamic range (HDR) processing.[ 309]
Isometric graphics — Introduced by Data East 's arcade video game Treasure Island (1981) for the DECO Cassette System .[ 310]
JPEG arithmetic coding — Patents providing the basis for JPEG's arithmetic coding algorithm include two Mitsubishi Electric patents by Toshihiro Kimura, Shigenori Kino, Fumitaka Ono and Masayuki Yoshida in 1989 and 1990.[ 312]
Pseudo-3D scaling — The arcade game Interceptor (1975) by Taito 's Tomohiro Nishikado introduced pseudo-3D sprite scaling. Sega 's arcade game Road Race (1976) enhanced pseudo-3D sprite scaling with background scaling effects.[ 314]
Scrolling — Introduced with the vertical scrolling in arcade racing game Speed Race (1974) by Taito's Tomohiro Nishikado.[ 314]
Super video graphics array (SVGA) — In 1988, NEC Home Electronics created the Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA) to develop the Super VGA (SVGA) computer display standard . The development of SVGA was led by NEC .[ 319]
Tile-based graphics — The tile-map model was introduced by Namco 's arcade game Galaxian (1979 ), which ran on the Namco Galaxian arcade system board .[ 320]
VR photography — In 1995, Takeo Kanade 's team introduced virtualized reality, where a multi-camera setup captures a real-world scene from different angles to render as a virtual world within a virtual reality .[ 322]
Instant noodles before boiling
All-Japan Judo Championships , 2007 men's final.
Chōmo Hanashiro , an Okinawan karate master (c irca 1938).
Tajōmaru and the samurai 's wife, two unreliable narrators in Akira Kurosawa 's Rashomon (1950), which the Rashomon effect is named after.
Sony home cinema setup, with full HD LCD television , digital TV set-top box , DVD player , PlayStation 3 video game console , and loudspeakers .
Sony Trinitron aperture grille CRT monitor .
Cathode-ray tube (CRT) with thermal electron emission — In 1925, Kenjiro Takayanagi invented a high-performance CRT display with a thermal electron emission source.[ 359]
Chip-on-glass (COG) — Developed by Kyocera in 1987, used for manufacturing LCD and OLED displays.[ 269]
Color TFT liquid-crystal display (TFT LCD) — In 1983, a-Si thin-film transistor (TFT) color liquid-crystal display (LCD) panels were demonstrated by Sanyo , Sanritsu and Canon Inc. [ 269]
Flat-panel video display — In 1974, Sharp Corporation 's scientists demonstrated the first flat-panel display capable of showing video images, using thin-film electroluminescence (TFEL) technology.[ 362]
High frame rate — Between 1974 and 1975, NHK developed prototype CRT displays capable of frame rates higher than the 60 Hz NTSC standard, reaching up to 500 Hz frame rate.[ 233]
Metal–insulator–metal LCD (MIM LCD) — In 1981, Seiko Epson co-developed the first LCD display using metal‑insulator‑metal (MIM) diodes .[ 54]
OLED display — In 1996, TDK demonstrated the first active-matrix OLED (AMOLED) QVGA display. In 1997, Pioneer Corporation released the first passive-matrix OLED (PMOLED ) display.[ 54]
Slot mask — A variant of shadow mask CRT display technology developed by Toshiba in 1971.[ 54]
S-Video — The S-Video cable standard was introduced in 1987 with JVC 's S-VHS format.[ 366]
TFT LCD projector — In 1986, Seiko Epson developed a TFT LCD light valve projector. In 1988, Sharp Corporation introduced a commercial TFT LCD projection system.[ 54]
Electronic television [ edit ]
A recreation of Kenjiro Takayanagi 's pioneering television experiment (1925), on display at the NHK Broadcasting Museum in Atagoyama, Tokyo.
Sony XEL-1 (2007), the world's first OLED TV .
Sony HDVS system for HD video (1980s), including HD videodisc player, VTRs , video processor , video cameras , camera control unit , display monitors , signal processors , and video switcher .
HDMI connector
High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) — In 2002, the HDMI founders included Hitachi , Panasonic , Maxell , Sony and Toshiba .[ 387]
High-definition television program (HDTV program) — NHK 's Images for Hi-Vision (1982) was the first HDTV program, broadcast on NHK's Hi-Vision analog HDTV .[ 388]
High-definition video codec
High-definition video disc — In the 1980s, HD video recording optical disc formats were released by Sanyo , Sony and JVC .[ 232]
High-definition video recording — Introduced with Sony HDVS (1981), including Hi-Vision VCR recording 1125i analog HDTV content on U-matic cassettes.[ 386]
Satellite HDTV — NHK used Yuri , a Japanese broadcasting satellite launched in 1978, to demonstrate analog HDTV satellite transmission in 1979.[ 233]
Super XGA (SXGA) — The super extended graphics array (SXGA) display standard was developed by JVC in 1997.[ 391]
Ultra HD (UHD) — Hitachi 's ARTC HD63484 (1984) GPU supports monochrome 4K UHD resolutions up to 4096×2048p or 4096×4096i. The resolutions were targeted at the bit-mapped desktop publishing market.[ 393]
8K resolution — Between 1995 and 2003, NHK , JVC and Ikegami Tsushinki developed a prototype 8K Super Hi-Vision video system, demonstrated in 2003 with 8K compatible UHDTV , video camera , video disc recorder and video projector .[ 394]
10K resolution — In 2010, 120 megapixels image resolution and 13K horizontal resolution (13,280×9184) was reached using an APS-H CMOS sensor developed by Canon Inc. [ 395]
16K resolution — Sony , Nest+Visual and Indy Associates in early 2014 demonstrated 16K video, using a modified Sony F65 CineAlta camera. A 16K film was presented in March 2014 on a multi-screen video display at Tokyo International Airport .[ 396]
32K resolution — In 2018, Sony were working on developing a 32K display.[ 397]
Ultra HDTV (UHDTV) — Between 1995 and 2003, researchers from NHK , JVC and Ikegami Tsushinki developed a prototype UHDTV system, which they demonstrated as Super Hi-Vision in 2003.[ 394]
Upscaler TV — The Toshiba Regza ZF (2008) was the first upscaling TV, capable of upscaling standard definition (SD) content to full HD .[ 399]
The Nintendo 3DS (2011) was the first game console with an autostereoscopic 3D display , using parallax barrier technology.
2A Seiko quartz wristwatch using the chronograph function (movement 7T92)
Battery-powered electric clock — In 1885, Sakizō Yai invented a continuous electric clock powered by wet-cell batteries .[ 416]
Digital stopwatch — Seiko 's Stop Clock (1963), used at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics , was the first digital stopwatch .[ 417]
Digital wristwatch — In 1953, Yoshiro Nakamatsu invented the first prototype wristwatch with a digital display .[ 116]
Japanese clock (wadokei)
Portable quartz clock — Seiko 's Crystal Chronometer (1963), used at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, was the first portable quartz clock .[ 420]
Quartz wristwatch — The world's first quartz wristwatch was revealed in 1967, a prototype of the Astron revealed by Seiko in Japan, where it was in development since 1958. It was eventually released to the public in 1969.[ 421]
Self-winding chronograph — In early 1969, Seiko produced the first commercial self-winding chronograph with a vertical clutch system and column wheel.[ 424]
Spring Drive — A watch movement which was first conceived by Yoshikazu Akahane working for Seiko in 1977 and was patented in 1982. It features a true continuously sweeping second hand, rather than the traditional beats per time unit.[ 367]
Smartwatch — In the 1980s, Seiko began to develop computers in the form of watches, starting with the Data 2000 (1984) watch.[ 425]
Television watch — The world's first television watch, the TV-Watch, was released by Seiko in 1982. It use an active-matrix LCD display.[ 367]
Sony 's U-matic , the first videocassette format, introduced in 1971.
Betamax (top) and VHS (bottom) tapes were respectively created by Japanese companies Sony and JVC .
Helical scan video tape recorder (VTR) — Invented by Norikazu Sawazaki in 1953. In 1959, Toshiba released the first commercial helical scan VTR.[ 430]
Inter-frame motion compensation (MC) — In 1959, the concept of inter-frame motion compensation was proposed by NHK researchers Y. Taki, M. Hatori and S. Tanaka. They proposed predictive inter-frame video coding in the temporal dimension .[ 435]
H.261 — The majority of patents for the H.261 (1988) video coding standard were from Japanese companies, including Hitachi , Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT), Toshiba , KDDI , Sony , Sharp Corporation , Oki and Matsushita .[ 436]
VC-1 — Japanese companies that contributed patents towards the VC-1 (2006) video coding format include Panasonic , Hitachi, Mitsubishi Electric , Sony, JVC Kenwood , Toshiba, Fujitsu , Sharp, and NTT.[ 437]
AV1 — Japanese companies that contributed patents towards the development of the AV1 (2018) video coding format include NTT and Toshiba.[ 438]
Laserdisc player (LD player) — In February 1979, Pioneer Corporation released the first laserdisc (LD) player for business use. In June 1980, Pioneer released the first LD player for home use.[ 429]
MPEG — The Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG) was co-founded by Hiroshi Yasuda .[ 439]
MPEG-1 — Majority of companies that contributed patents for MPEG-1 (1991) were Japanese companies, including Fujitsu , Matsushita Electric , Mitsubishi Electric , NEC , NHK and Pioneer .[ 440]
H.262/MPEG-2 Part 2 — The majority of patents contributed towards MPEG-2 (1995) were from Japanese companies, including Sony , Mitsubishi, Panasonic , JVC Kenwood , Toshiba , Hitachi , Fujitsu, KDDI , NTT , Sanyo , Sharp and Canon Inc. [ 441]
MPEG-4 Visual (H.263 ) — In 1998, Toshiba developed the first MPEG-4 (MP4) large-scale integration (LSI) video codec chip, enabling the video compression and video decoding of MP4 video files .[ 111]
AVC (H.264) — The majority of patents for AVC (2003) were from Japanese companies, including Panasonic , Godo kaisha , Toshiba, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT), Sony and Fujitsu .[ 442]
HEVC (H.265) — Japanese companies that contributed patents towards HEVC (2013) include NTT, JVC , NEC , Fujitsu, Maxell , NHK and Canon Inc. [ 443]
VVC (H.266) — Japanese companies that contributed patents towards VVC (2020) include NTT, Godo Kaisha, JVC, KDDI , Mitsubishi Electric , NEC, Panasonic and Fujitsu.[ 444]
Video floppy — The first prototype video floppy disk was developed in 1977 by Canon Inc. The Video Floppy format was demonstrated by Sony and introduced under the Mavipak name in 1981 for their prototype Mavica camera.[ 235]
A modern pachinko machine
Modelguns — Japan's Model Gun Collection, founded in 1959, was the first manufacturer of modelguns, which they debuted in 1962.[ 445]
Model robot
Pachinko — Pachinko machines were first built during the 1920s as a children's toy called the Corinth game .[ 446]
Renju is played on a 15×15 grid Go board .
A child playing with a classic Japanese Mogura Taiji (Whac‑A‑Mole) machine.
Audio-visual novelty game — Electro-mechanical (EM) arcade game genre originating from Japan, pioneered by Periscope (1965) from Namco and Sega .
Bonus points — Dates back to Sega's Duck Hunt (1968). It awarded a higher score of 15 points for a head shot , whereas a standard body shot earned 10 points.[ 455]
Car combat — The concept of ramming cars dates back to Sega's Stunt Car (1970) and Dodgem Crazy (1972). They reversed racing game conventions by making vehicle collisions the objective of the gameplay.
Block breaker — In Sega's Stunt Car (1970), the car is used as a kicker to launch balls into holes on the playfield, anticipating the gameplay of Breakout (1976).[ 457]
Cockpit arcade cabinet — In 1970, Kasco's Indy 500 (F-type) introduced a sit-down cockpit arcade cabinet .[ 458]
Cooperative gameplay (co-op) — Periscope (1965) by Namco and Sega was both a single-player game and a three-player co-op game.[ 459]
3-player (3P) — Periscope (1965) was both a single-player game and a three-player game.
First-person light gun shooter — Sega 's Duck Hunt (1968) was the first shooter game to project first-person graphics on a screen.[ 455]
Headshot — The concept dates back to Sega's Duck Hunt (1968). The game awarded the player a higher score for a head shot, earning 15 points, whereas a standard body shot earned 10 points.[ 455]
First-person shooter (FPS) — Sega's Jet Rocket (1970) was the earliest FPS, with free-roaming first-person movement and shooting. Sega expanded its FPS gameplay with Heli ‑Shooter (1977) using microprocessor technology.[ 461]
First-person racing game — Kasco's arcade racer Indy 500 (1968) introduced pseudo-3D graphics projected using mirrors to give a first-person perspective on a screen.[ 462]
Flight simulator game — Sega 's Jet Rocket (1970), a first-person combat flight simulator , was the first flight simulator game.[ 463]
Full-motion video (FMV) — Nintendo 's EM arcade game Wild Gunman (1974), published by Sega in North America, was the first FMV game.[ 464]
Live action — Wild Gunman (1974) was the first game to use live-action actors.[ 465]
Adult game — The first erotic game was Nintendo's FMV arcade game Fascination (1974).[ 466]
Female character — Nintendo's FMV arcade game Fascination (1974) featured the earliest female character in an electronic game, portrayed by a live-action Swedish model.[ 466]
Family fun center — Modern family fun centers appeared in Japan during the late 1960s, notably arcades operated by Sega .[ 467]
Handheld electronic game — Waco 's Electronic Tic-Tac-Toe (1972) is commonly cited as the first commercial handheld electronic game.[ 468]
Head-to-head shooting — Sega's Gun Fight (1969) introduced competitive head-to-head shooting between two players, inspiring several early shooter video games .[ 469]
Interactive movie game (cinematic game) — Nintendo's Wild Gunman (1974) was the first interactive movie game.[ 470]
Medal game — Medal games began in Japan during the early 1970s and started becoming popular with Sega's Harness Racing (1974), Nintendo's EVR Race (1975) and Aruze 's The Derby Vφ (1975).[ 471]
Ninja game — The earliest ninja game was Kasco's EM arcade shooter game Ninja Gun (1977).[ 472]
Open world — Sega 's Jet Rocket (1970) is considered the earliest open world game. Sega expanded its first-person open world gameplay with Heli ‑Shooter (1977) using microprocessor technology.[ 461]
Pseudo-3D — Pseudo-3D effects date back to Periscope (1965) by Namco and Sega.[ 473]
4D effect — Taito 's arcade game Cycle Rider (1970) was the first game with a 4D effect in the form of wind blowing at the player.[ 474]
Quick time event (QTE) — Nintendo 's electro-mechanical arcade game Wild Gunman (1974) featured the earliest quick time events (QTE).[ 475]
Score printing — Sega's arcade title Duck Hunt (1968) was the first game to print out the player's score. [ 454]
Submarine simulator — Periscope (1965), by Namco and Sega, used lights and plastic waves to simulate sinking ships from a submarine.[ 476]
Whac-A-Mole — Invented in 1975 by Kazuo Yamada of TOGO , based on the designer's 1974 pencil sketches.[ 477]
Playing Dance Dance Revolution , one of the most successful rhythm games .
Chiptune — Taito 's arcade video game Space Invaders (1978), designed by Tomohiro Nishikado , had the earliest continuous background music produced from a sound chip .[ 478]
Digital sample loops — Rally-X (1980), composed by Namco 's Toshio Kai, demonstrated the earliest use of digital sample loops.[ 481]
Electronic sound effects — Introduced with electro-mechanical (EM) arcade game Periscope (1965) by Namco and Sega .[ 451]
Game music — Sega introduced electronic game music with their EM arcade game Jumbo (1969), which used an 8-track player to stream electronic circus music .[ 482]
Microphone game controller — Nintendo 's Famicom (1983) introduced the first microphone game controller.[ 484]
Pulse-code modulation (PCM) — Namco 's arcade game King & Balloon (1980) was the first video game to feature PCM digital samples , using a digital-to-analog convertor (DAC) for voice synthesis .[ 484]
Rhythm game — In the early 1970s, Kasco created a rhythm-based EM arcade game, designed by Kenzou Furukawa, whose idea was "a game where you'd lift girls skirts in time to some rhythm" inspired by the 1969 Oh! Mouretsu commercials.[ 291]
Rhythm game accessories
Streaming audio — Sega's EM arcade game MotoPolo (1968) introduced an 8-track player unit that plays sounds from endless tape cartridge through a speaker .[ 490]
Voice acting — Dates back to Nintendo 's EM game Wild Gunman (1974), where the full-motion video (FMV) intro scene has a voiced narrator giving gameplay instructions.[ 464]
Wavetable synthesis — The Namco WSG (Waveform Sound Generator) was a wavetable synthesis chip introduced in 1980 and used in several arcade system boards including the Namco Pac-Man (1980) and Namco Galaga (1981).[ 479]
Nintendo Entertainment System (NES)
8-bit handheld console — Nintendo 's Game Boy (1989) was the first handheld game console with an 8-bit CPU .[ 495]
Dual-ported video RAM (DP VRAM) — The Sega Mega Drive (1988) was the first console to use DP VRAM .[ 496]
Hybrid console — The Sega Nomad (1995) was the first hybrid console.[ 498]
Mass storage — The Famicom Disk System (1986) introduced mass disk storage to console gaming, using Mitsumi 's Quick Disk format.[ 499]
Multi-screen display — First appeared with Nintendo 's Game & Watch series. The first game in the Multi-Screen series was Oil Panic (1982).[ 501]
Nintendo — Gunpei Yokoi was the creator of the Game Boy and Virtual Boy and worked on Famicom (NES), the Metroid series, Game Boy Pocket and did extensive work on the system we know today as the Nintendo Entertainment System (Famicom).[ 502]
Online console multiplayer — In 1987, Nintendo launched the Family Computer Network System for the Famicom in Japan. Online games developed for the system include a graphical, competitive online multiplayer version of Go .[ 503]
PlayStation — The first Sony PlayStation was invented by Ken Kutaragi . Research and development for the PlayStation began in 1990, headed by Kutaragi, a Sony engineer.[ 508]
Saved game — The Legend of Zelda (1986) for the Famicom Disk System was the first console game with a save feature, using Mitsumi 's Quick Disk format.[ 509]
Touchscreen handheld — In the early 1990s, Sega were planning to release a Game Gear successor with a touchscreen interface. However, touchscreen technology was expensive, so they instead released the Sega Nomad in 1995.[ 513]
TV game — The Sharp Nintendo Television (C1 NES TV) is a CRT television with a built-in Famicom that was produced by Sharp Corporation under license from Nintendo. It was originally released for Japan in October 1983 as the My Computer TV.
Vertical scrolling game console — The first console with vertical scrolling was Nintendo's dedicated console Color TV-Game Racing 112 (1978), a clone of Taito 's arcade video game Speed Race (1974).[ 516]
Virtual reality headset (VR) — The Sega VR headset was an early unreleased VR device with built-in motion tracking, first announced in 1991. Its sensors tracked the player's movement and head position.[ 518]
Nintendo 64 controller , debuted in 1995 and released in 1996, popularized analog thumbstick controls.
Donkey Kong (1982), showing its revolutionary D-pad design.
Controller of the PlayStation 2 , the best-selling video game console of all time.
Dual control — Sega 's EM game Missile (1969) had dual-control scheme, with two directional buttons moving a tank and a joystick used to shoot and steer the missile.
Force feedback — Sega 's arcade motorbike game Man T.T. (1976), also known as Fonz , was the first game using haptic technology for vibrating collisions.
Gamepad (joypad) — Introduced by Nintendo with the D-pad controller for the Donkey Kong Game & Watch handheld (1982) and the NES controller (1983).[ 527]
Joystick — Sega 's EM arcade game MotoPolo , released in early 1968, introduced joystick controllers, used to move miniature motorbikes in any direction on the table.[ 528]
Light gun toy — Nintendo introduced a light gun toy to the home market with the Kōsenjū SP (Beam Gun) in 1970. The gun was developed by Nintendo's Gunpei Yokoi with Sharp 's Masayuki Uemura .[ 531]
Motion controller — Sega 's arcade boxing game Heavyweight Champ (1985) featured the first motion-based controllers.[ 534]
Motion simulator — The first hydraulic motion simulator arcade cabinets were developed by Sega for the arcade games Space Tactics (1981), Hang-On (1985) and Space Harrier (1985).[ 537]
Periscope — Periscope (1965) by Namco and Sega introduced a new controller in the form of a periscope viewer. Its periscope viewer arcade cabinet design was later adopted by several arcade video games.[ 539]
Positional gun — Earliest example of a positional gun was used for Sega 's EM arcade gun game Sea Devil (1972).[ 540]
Racing wheel with accelerator pedal — Kasco's EM game Indy 500 (1968) featured a steering wheel along with an accelerator pedal.[ 541]
Touch control — In 1985, the Sega Graphic Board for the SG-1000 and SC-3000 was a touch tablet with stylus pen , used for the drawing game Terebi Oekaki .[ 542]
Trackball control — The earliest use of trackball controls in a video game was Sega 's arcade football/soccer game World Cup , released in March 1978.[ 544]
Airsoft players defending an objective.
Nissan Silvia (S14) performing a drift (2014)
Space Invaders (1978), the first arcade shoot 'em up video game.
Kung-Fu Master (1984), the first side-scrolling arcade beat 'em up .
Beat 'em up — In 1984, Irem 's Kung-Fu Master laid the foundations for scrolling beat 'em ups with its hand-to-hand combat against multiple enemies.[ 578]
Bonus stage — The first bonus stage in video game history is in Rally-X , released by Namco in 1980. This became a signature feature of other arcade games.[ 579]
Boss battle in real-time — Sega 's Samurai, released March 1980, had the player samurai fight a number of swordsmen before confronting a more powerful boss samurai.[ 580]
Branching storylines — The Portopia Serial Murder Case (1983) introduced non-linear branching storylines, presenting different scenarios in response to player actions.[ 585]
Breaking the fourth wall — Hideo Kojima 's Metal Gear (1987) featured the earliest video game narrative to break the fourth wall.[ 587]
Camera change button — Introduced in 1991 by MNM Software's Japan-exclusive Sharp X68000 games Magical Shot and Star Wars: Attack on the Death Star .[ 588]
Character action game — Genre was established by Namco's Pac-Man (1980).[ 590]
Cheat code — Dates back to the Konami Code , created in 1986 by Kazuhisa Hashimoto as he worked on porting the 1985 arcade game Gradius for use on the Nintendo Entertainment System .[ 591]
Climbing — Nichibutsu 's arcade game Crazy Climber (1980) was the first climbing game.[ 592]
Combo — Data East 's arcade DECO Cassette System game Flash Boy (1981), a scrolling action game , had the earliest combo mechanic. When the player punches an enemy and it explodes, debris can destroy other enemies.[ 593]
Command menu — Yuji Horii 's The Hokkaido Serial Murder Case: The Okhotsk Disappearance (1984) introduced a command menu system.[ 596]
Color vector graphics — The Sega G80 arcade system, launched in 1981, possessed the world's first color vector X-Y video system.
Co-op action video game — Sega's arcade light gun shooter Balloon Gun (1974) was the earliest co-op action video game.[ 599]
Cover system — In Tomohiro Nishikado 's Western Gun (1975), the player characters could take cover behind destructible objects.[ 600]
Cutscene — Taito 's Space Invaders Part II (1979) introduced cutscenes as brief comical intermissions between levels.[ 579]
Destructible object — Destructible objects were introduced by Tomohiro Nishikado 's Western Gun (1975).[ 600]
Dialogue tree — Introduced by Yuji Horii 's The Portopia Serial Murder Case (1983), with branching dialogue choices considered "way ahead of its time". [ 586]
Difficulty level — Dates back to Tomohiro Nishikado 's Speed Race (1974).[ 607]
Digitized character sprite — Magical Company 's 2D arcade fighting game Last Apostle Puppet Show (1988) was the first game to feature fully digitized character sprites .[ 613]
Drifting mechanic — Introduced by Sega's Out Run (1986). The mechanic incorporates AI assistance and details such as, if the car's tires grip the road surface too closely, the car's handling becomes too twitchy.[ 614]
Farm life sim — The genre began with the SNES game Harvest Moon (1996).[ 615]
Female video game character — In Nintendo's arcade game Sheriff (1979), the non-player character Betty was the earliest female character in a video game.[ 480]
Street Fighter II (1991), an influential arcade fighting game .
Fonz arcade cabinet (1976)
Licensed game — Sega's Fonz (1976) was the first video game to license a television character. Sega predicted a coalition between the show business and amusement arcade industries.[ 648]
Lives — Taito 's classic arcade video game Space Invaders (1978) is credited with introducing multiple lives to video games.[ 649]
Maze chase — Heiankyo Alien (1979) was an early maze chase game predating Namco 's Pac-Man (1980), which established the maze chase genre and spawning many imitations.[ 651]
Microtransaction — Double Dragon 3: The Rosetta Stone (1990) arcade game introduced shops where coins purchase upgrades, power-ups , health, weapons, moves and characters.[ 652]
Monster-taming game — Namco's Gaplus (1984) introduced a tractor beam that allows the player to capture alien enemies and turn them into useful allies.[ 618]
Motion capture — In Magical Company 's arcade fighting game Last Apostle Puppet Show (1988), an early form of motion capture was used to animate the 2D digitized sprites .[ 613]
Multi-directional shooter — Taito 's Western Gun (1975) laid the foundations for the multi-directional shooter genre.[ 654]
Named character — In Nintendo's arcade game Sheriff (1979), the player character Mr. Jack and non-player character Betty were the earliest video game characters with names.[ 604]
Ninja video games — The earliest ninja video game was SNK 's arcade shooter Sasuke vs. Commander (1980).[ 655]
Online graphical multiplayer — LINKS, a Japanese online network for the MSX launched in 1986, featured early graphical online multiplayer games: T&E Soft 's Daiva Dr. Amandora and Super Laydock , Telenet 's Girly Block , and Bothtec 's Dires .[ 656]
Open world video game — Tomohiro Nishikado's Western Gun (1975) is considered to be the earliest rudimentary open world video game. [ 657]
Open-world graphic adventure — Yuji Horii 's The Portopia Serial Murder Case (1983) was the earliest open world graphic adventure game .[ 586]
Platformer — Space Panic (1980) by Universal Entertainment is considered the first platformer. Donkey Kong (1981) by Nintendo's Shigeru Miyamoto was the first platformer that allowed players to jump over obstacles and across gaps.[ 662]
Power-up — Pac-Man from 1980 is credited as the first video game to feature a power-up mechanic.[ 618]
A stripped multi-mode optical fiber .
Blue LEDs
Integrated circuits [ edit ]
Intel 8259A , a version of the Intel 8259 (1976), the first programmable interrupt controller (PIC) designed by Masatoshi Shima .
445–450 nm blue laser (middle)
Toshiba SD cards , which are memory cards using flash memory .
3D holographic data storage — In 1971, Yasutsugu Takeda's Hitachi research team developed holographic memory data storage using thin film hologram technology.[ 701]
3.5-inch floppy disk — A standardized floppy disk format pioneered by Sony in 1981.[ 702]
Compact disc (CD) — The CD format was jointly developed by Sony (Toshitada Doi ) and Philips (Joop Sinjou) between 1979 and 1983.[ 102]
Digital versatile disc (DVD) — The DVD format (1995) was developed by three Japanese companies (Sony , Toshiba and Panasonic ) and one Dutch company (Philips ).
Dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) — Toshiba 's Toscal BC-1411 electronic calculator (released in November 1965) introduced bipolar DRAM, using discrete bipolar transistors and capacitors as DRAM memory cells .[ 705]
EEPROM — Electrotechnical Laboratory (ETL) began research in 1971, fabricating an electrically re-programmable non-volatile memory in 1972.[ 709]
Flash memory — Flash memory was invented by Dr. Fujio Masuoka while working for Toshiba . In 1980, he filed a patent for NOR flash memory.[ 710]
NAND flash — Invented by Fujio Masuoka, while working at Toshiba, in 1986.[ 710]
Charge trap flash (CTF) — In 1991, NEC 's research team including N. Kodama, K. Oyama and Hiroki Shirai developed a type of flash memory that incorporated a charge trap method.[ 711]
Quad-level cell (QLC) — In 1996, NEC introduced a flash memory 3D IC chip with QLC cells.[ 712]
Triple-level cell (TLC) — In 2009, Toshiba introduced a NAND flash memory 3D IC chip with TLC cells.[ 713]
Vertical NAND (V-NAND) — V-NAND, also known as 3D NAND, stacks NAND flash memory cells vertically within a chip using 3D CTP technology. V-NAND technology was introduced by Toshiba in 2007.[ 714]
Megabyte memory chip (MB) — In January 1984, Hitachi demonstrated the first 1 MB DRAM memory chip.[ 715]
Memory card — In February 1984, Japanese company Logitec demonstrated the first erasable optical storage memory card. It was originally created for use with arcade video game systems, allowing interchangeable multi-game arcade cabinets .[ 717]
Minidisc — In 1992, Sony introduced the MiniDisc (MD), a music recording and playback format intended to replace audio cassettes .[ 720]
NMOS logic semiconductor memory — In 1968, NEC introduced a 144-bit NMOS static random-access memory (SRAM) chip, with each memory cell composed of six NMOS transistors .[ 268]
Optical disc drive (ODD) — Toshiba 's Tosfile, developed from 1978 to 1979, was the first optical disc recorder drive. It was capable of storing digital images and documents on optical disc .[ 111]
Perpendicular magnetic recording (PMR) — In 1976, Shun-ichi Iwasaki verified advantages in PMR. In 1978, T. Fujiwara began developing floppy disk media optimized for PMR and the first commercial magnetic storage devices using the technique.[ 722]
Spin-transfer torque (STT) — In 1997, Sony Research Center published the first patent for STT RAM .[ 725]
Intel 4004 (1971), the first single‑chip microprocessor , was co‑designed by Masatoshi Shima of Busicom .
A "sliced and unrolled" representation of a carbon nanotube as a strip of a graphene molecule.
A double-gate fin field-effect transistor (FinFET).
Power MOSFET transistor used in a power supply unit .
A white LED light .
A lithium-ion battery pack for a laptop computer .
Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant , the largest nuclear power plant and the first with advanced boiling water reactor (ABWR).
Bifacial solar panel installation
IKAROS , a space probe that used solar sail technology for interplanetary spaceflight in 2010.
Atmospheric science [ edit ]
A downburst .
Image from Kishitsu Geryō Zukan ("Surgical Casebook") by Hanaoka Seishu (circa 1825).
10,000 steps — In 1963, Dr. Iwao Ohya, head of a Tokyo clinic, proposed the ideal of walking 10,000 steps a day.[ 778]
Acetylcholine neurotransmitter — In 1926, Kenmatsu Shimidzu discovered that acetylcholine was a neuromuscular neurotransmitter.[ 779]
Adrenaline (epinephrine) — Jōkichi Takamine and Keizo Uenaka discovered epinephrine in 1900. Takamine successfully isolated and purified the andrenaline hormone .[ 779]
Agar — Agar was discovered in Japan around 1658 by Mino Tarōzaemon.[ 780]
ALK positive lung cancer — Hiroyuki Mano, Research Institute director at the National Cancer Center , led the discovery of lung cancer fusion genes .[ 684]
Antiparasitic drugs — Satoshi Ōmura discovered antiparasitic drugs including avermectin , endectocide and ivermectin .[ 684]
Antiretroviral medication (anti-AIDS drugs) — Hiroaki Mitsuya discovered the anti-HIV drug zidovudine (AZT) and anti-AIDS drugs including didanosine (ddI) and zalcitabine (ddC).[ 684]
Aspergillus oryzae — The genome for Aspergillus oryzae was sequenced and released by a consortium of Japanese biotechnology companies, in late 2005.[ 781]
Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) — Yoshizumi Ishino discovered CRISPR in 1987. It is the basis for CRISPR gene editing .[ 782]
Condensin — Discovered by Riken senior researcher Tatsuya Hirano.[ 684]
Dementia with Lewy bodies — First described in 1976 by psychiatrist Kenji Kosaka . He was awarded the Asahi Prize in 2013 for his discovery.[ 684]
Dopamine in striatum — In 1959, Isamu Sano discovered a high concentration of dopamine in the striatum.[ 779]
Endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) — This surgical procedure was developed in Japan by M. Tada, M. Murata and F. Murakami between 1974 and 1984.[ 783]
Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD) — Discovered by Yukio Fukuyama, Tatsushi Toda and Tamao Endo.[ 684]
General anesthesia — Hanaoka Seishū was the first surgeon who used the general anaesthesia in surgery, in 1804. He also dared to operate on cancers of the breast and oropharynx, remove necrotic bone, and perform amputations of extremities.[ 784]
Green fluorescent protein (GFP) — Discovered by Osamu Shimomura .[ 684]
Immunoglobulin E (IgE) — Antibody only found in mammals . It was discovered during 1966–1967 by Kimishige Ishizaka 's team at the Children's Asthma Research Institute and Hospital in Denver , Colorado.[ 785]
Induced pluripotent stem cell — The induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSCs) is a kind of pluripotent stem cell which can be created using a mature cell. iPSCs technology was developed by Shinya Yamanaka and his lab workers in 2006.[ 786]
Chemical structure of methamphetamine .
Aluminium-zinc alloy — By alloying zinc with aluminium , Sumitomo Metal Industries developed the 7075 aluminium alloy (extra super duralumin ), a strong lightweight metal, in 1935.[ 792]
Ephedrine synthesis — In 1885, the chemical synthesis of ephedrine was first accomplished by Japanese organic chemist Nagai Nagayoshi .[ 793]
Ferrite magnet — Yogoro Kato and Takeshi Takei of the Tokyo Institute of Technology synthesized the first ferrite compounds in 1930.[ 794]
Frontier molecular orbital theory — Kenichi Fukui developed and published a paper on frontier molecular orbital theory in 1952.[ 796]
Gold synthesis — The first synthesis of gold was conducted by Japanese physicist Hantaro Nagaoka , who synthesized gold from mercury in 1924 by neutron bombardment.[ 797]
KS steel — Magnetic resistant steel that is three times more resistant than tungsten steel . It was invented by Kotaro Honda in 1917.[ 798]
Methamphetamine (meth) — Methamphetamine was first synthesized from ephedrine in Japan in 1894 by chemist Nagayoshi Nagai .[ 800]
Nihonium — Element 113. Named after Nihon , the local name for Japan. It was discovered by a Japanese team under Kōsuke Morita .[ 684]
Photocatalysis — Akira Fujishima discovered photocatalysis occurring on the surface of titanium dioxide in 1967.[ 802]
Statin — The statin class of drugs was first discovered by Akira Endo , a Japanese biochemist working for the pharmaceutical company Sankyo . Mevastatin was the first discovered member of the statin class.[ 803]
Takadiastase — A form of diastase which results from the growth, development and nutrition of a distinct microscopic fungus known as Aspergillus oryzae. Jōkichi Takamine developed the method first used for its extraction in the late 19th century.[ 804]
Synthetic fluorite — In 1968, synthetic fluorite was first successfully mass-produced by Canon Inc. [ 197]
Urushiol — Urushiol, a mixture of alkyl catechols, was discovered by Rikou Majima. Majima also discovered that Urushiol was an allergen which gave members of the genus Toxicodendron , such as poison ivy and poison oak , their skin-irritating properties.[ 805]
Miniature USB microscope , a type of digital microscope .
3D holographic radiography — In 1969, Tadashi Kasahara's Konishiroku and Tokyo University research team invented holographic 3D X-ray imaging radiography.[ 400]
Amino acid analyzer — JEOL 's JLC-5AH (1968) was the first amino acid analyzer.[ 751]
Audiometer — Nihon Kohden 's MAW-1 White Noise Audiometer (1951) was the first audiometer.[ 789]
Automated dispensing cabinet — In 2004, Sumitomo Heavy Industries released the first automatic radiopharmaceutical administering device for positron emission tomography .[ 806]
Confocal microscope — In 1942, Zyun Koana described an early confocal microscope .[ 807]
Electrosurgical insulated-tip knife (IT knife) — Introduced by Olympus Corporation in 2002 for endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) surgical procedures .[ 811]
Endless hot rolling — In 2000, the first endless hot rolling process was jointly developed by Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal , Kawasaki Steel , Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and IHI Corporation .[ 813]
Esophagogastroduodenoscope (EGD) — Japanese engineer Mutsuo Sugiura invented the first gastrocamera (EGD). Olympus released it as the Olympus GT-1 in 1950.[ 118]
Fitness tracker — In 1965, Juri Kato produced the Manpo-kei (10,000 step meter), the first commercial pedometer fitness wearable technology .[ 778]
Flexible bronchoscopy — Shigeto Ikeda invented the flexible fiber bronchoscope in 1966.[ 814]
Friction analysis of galvannealed sheet steel — In 2003, Sumitomo Metal Industries and Toyota researchers conducted the first friction analysis of galvannealed sheet steel using Dr. STAMP technology.[ 817]
High-definition video brain surgery — In 1987, a brain surgery was first recorded in HD video using NHK 's Hi-Vision analog HDTV technology.[ 388]
High-resolution ultrasound machine — Developed by Toshiba between 1971 and 1975.[ 111]
High-tensile strength plate — In 2007, Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal developed the first high-tensile strength plate for improving the fatigue strength of welded joints .[ 813]
Medical imaging display monitor — In 1982, JVC introduced a CRT monitor for medical imaging.[ 360]
Medical monitor — In 1957, JVC introduced a medical CRT display with deflection yoke technology. In 1972, JVC introduced the first 12‑inch raster display medical CRT monitor .[ 360]
Non-mydriatic retinal camera — The first non-mydriatic retinal camera was the CR-45NM (1976) by Canon Inc. [ 196]
Portable electrocardiograph (ECG) — Taro Takemi built the first portable electrocardiograph (ECG) in 1937.[ 818]
Sub-pixel super-resolution imaging — In 2007, JVC introduced the first 15 megapixel LCD medical monitor using independent sub-pixel technology, used for mammography .[ 360]
Vectorcardiography (VCG) — Taro Takemi invented the vectorcardiograph in 1939.[ 818]
Scheme of a single candlestick chart .
A page from Seki Kōwa 's Katsuyo Sampo (1712), tabulating binomial coefficients and Bernoulli numbers .
Amari distance — It is named after Japanese information theorist Shun'ichi Amari and was originally introduced as a performance index for blind source separation .[ 828]
Bernoulli number — Studied by Seki Kōwa and published after his death in 1712, a year before Jacob Bernoulli independently rediscovered the concept.[ 829]
Calculus — Seki Kōwa (1642–1708) founded Enri , a mathematical system with the same purpose as calculus.[ 830]
Determinant — Introduced by Seki Kōwa in 1683 to study elimination of variables in higher‑order algebraic equations , to give shorthand representation for the resultant .[ 831]
Elimination theory — In 1683 (Kai-Fukudai-no-Hō ), Seki Kōwa came up with elimination theory, based on resultant.[ 831]
Resultant — In 1683, Seki Kōwa came up with elimination theory, based on resultant. To express resultant, he developed the notion of determinant.[ 831]
Hironaka's example — Hironaka's example is a non-Kähler complex manifold that is a deformation of Kähler manifolds discovered by Heisuke Hironaka .[ 832]
Information geometry — The modern theory is largely due to Shun'ichi Amari , whose work has been greatly influential on the development of the field.[ 833]
Itô calculus — Developed by Kiyosi Itô in the 1940s. Concepts include Itô integral and Itô's lemma . It is widely used in various fields, especially mathematical finance .[ 834]
Itô diffusion — A diffusion process developed by Kiyosi Itô .[ 834]
Iwasawa theory — Initially created by Kenkichi Iwasawa , Iwasawa theory was originally developed as a Galois module theory of ideal class groups .[ 836]
Japanese theorem for cyclic polygons — This result comes from a sangaku tablet dated 1800.[ 837]
Kenmotsu manifold — Discovered by Katsuei Kenmotsu in 1972.[ 838]
Richardson extrapolation — Takebe Katahiro used Richardson extrapolation in 1695, about 200 years earlier than Richardson.[ 839]
Sangaku — Japanese geometric puzzles on wooden tablets created during the Edo period (1603–1867) by members of all social classes. The Dutch Japanologist Isaac Titsingh introduced sangaku to the West when he returned to Europe in the late 1790s.[ 840]
Soddy's hexlet — Irisawa Shintarō Hiroatsu analyzed Soddy's hexlet in a Sangaku in 1822 and was the first person to do so.[ 841]
Takagi existence theorem — Takagi existence theorem was developed by Teiji Takagi in isolation during World War I . He presented it at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1920.[ 842]
Two-valued Boolean algebra — Discovered independently by NEC engineer Akira Nakashima. From 1934 to 1936, his switching circuit theory showed that two-valued Boolean algebra can describe the operation of switching circuits.[ 686]
Mesons of spin 0 form a nonet .
Popular emoji , including the Face with Tears of Joy emoji .
A thread on 4chan , a popular English language imageboard inspired by Japanese imageboard Futaba Channel (2chan).
Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) — Fujitsu 's FETEX-150 (1981) was the first commercial ATM electronic switching system (ESS).[ 236]
Digital videophone — The first practical videophone for home use was Mitsubishi Electric 's Luma 1000 (1986), where digital images were streamed over a phone line .[ 858]
Fiber-optic communication — First proposed by Junichi Nishizawa in 1963.[ 859]
Gigabit per second (Gbit/s) — In 1979, Takashi Kimura of Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) demonstrated 1 Gbit/s fibre-optic transmission over 20 km .[ 862]
Image sharing — In the 1980s, NTT 's INS-Net introduced an image sharing service supporting high-resolution color digital images .[ 864]
Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) — NTT 's Integrated Services Network (INS), also known as INS-Net, was the first ISDN service. After field tests from 1984 to 1987, NTT launched INS-Net in 1988.[ 864]
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) — Originates from Toshiba 's Cell Switch Router (CSR) technology in 1994.[ 865]
Online karaoke — In 1992, Brother Industries introduced Karaoke Joysound , the first karaoke network system via ISDN. In 1993, Brother introduced JS-1X, the first centralized network control system for karaoke establishments.[ 866]
Online magazine — The first online magazine was Internet Magazine launched by Japanese company Impress in September 1994.[ 867]
Optical communication — First proposed by Junichi Nishizawa in 1963.[ 859]
Textboard — Textboards like imageboards were invented in 1990s Japan. However, unlike imageboards, textboards are relatively unknown outside Japan.[ 869]
VTuber — In 2010, Nitroplus uploaded YouTube videos with Super Sonico talking to the audience about herself and company releases.[ 870]
J-SH04 , released by Sharp Corporation and J-Phone in 2000, was the first camera phone capable of picture messaging .
Cellular network — The first cellular mobile network , 1G , was launched in Japan by Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) in 1979, initially available only in Tokyo.[ 871]
Commercial cell phone — The Panasonic TZ‑801 (1979) was the first commercial cellular mobile phone, using NTT's cellular 1G mobile network in Tokyo.[ 873]
Lithium-ion battery mobile phone — In 1991, Sony lithium-ion rechargeable batteries were first used in mobile phones.[ 876]
Mobile data — The first 2G digital mobile networks were introduced in Japan, with Personal Digital Cellular (1980s) and Personal Handy-phone System (1989).[ 872]
Mobile Internet — Toshiba 's T24D/X (1990) cellular modem enabled laptop computers to connect with a mobile phone and use wireless Internet via mobile network.[ 880]
Multimedia messaging service (MMS) — Picture messaging was introduced with the J-SH04 , released by Sharp Corporation and J-Phone in 2000.[ 97]
Ringtone — In September 1996, IDO sold Digital Minimo D319 by Denso . It was the first mobile phone where a user could input an original melody, rather than having to use preloaded melodies. These phones proved to be popular in Japan.[ 883]
Smartphone — In the 1990s, early Japanese smartphones such as Toshiba 's Genio, Kyocera 's DataScope and Matsushita Electric 's Pinocchio featured handheld PC smart device features and mobile Internet such as i-mode .[ 885]
Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (W-CDMA) — In 1998, the first wideband code-division multiple access network was launched by NTT DoCoMo in Japan.[ 878]
A modern high-gain UHF Yagi television antenna .
Cordless phone with answering machine — In 1989, Sharp Corporation introduced the first low-power cordless phone with an answering machine function.[ 97]
Direct broadcast satellite (DBS) — Between 1965 and 1984, the first practical direct broadcast satellite (DBS) service was co-developed by NHK Science & Technology Research Laboratories , NASDA and Toshiba .[ 887]
Hands free Bluetooth car phone — Introduced in 2003 with Honda 's 2004 Acura TL .[ 122]
Meteor burst communications — The first observation of interaction between meteors and radio propagation was reported by Hantaro Nagaoka in 1929.[ 888]
Mobile computer with wireless Internet — Fujitsu 's MV-BIBLO LOOX (2000) was the first mobile computer with built-in wireless Internet data transmission.[ 236]
Multi-tube radio — Matsushita Electric 's R-31 (1931) was the first three-tube radio.[ 889]
Near-field communication (NFC) — In March 2002, Sony and Philips established a technology specification for NFC and created a technical outline.[ 890]
Radio-controlled wheel transmitter — Futaba introduced the FP-T2F in 1974. It was the first to use a steering wheel onto a box transmitter.[ 891]
Semiconductor microwave communication — In 1963, NEC developed first solid-state electronic semiconductor microwave communications line.[ 267]
Single channel per carrier (SCPC) — In 1973, Fujitsu developed the first SCPC satellite communications system.[ 236]
Terahertz band wireless communication (THz) — Tadao Nagatsuma 's team demonstrated 120 GHz photonics video signal in 2000 and 10 Gbit/s broadband with 120 GHz signal in 2002. In 2014, Minoru Fujishima demonstrated 1 THz RF CMOS signal.[ 893]
WiMAX integrated circuit — In 2005, Fujitsu developed the first large-scale integration (LSI) chips for WiMAX-compliant base stations .[ 236]
Wireless earphones — Onkyo 's W800BT range, launched in 2015, were the first wireless in-ear headphones .[ 894]
Wireless game console — The earliest was the TV Tennis Electrotennis (1975) home console by Epoch Co. It connected wirelessly to a TV through ultra high frequency (UHF) antenna technology.[ 895]
Wireless guitar amplifier — Boss Corporation 's KATANA-AIR Wireless Guitar Amplifier (2018) was the first fully wireless guitar amplifier.[ 138]
Wireless image sharing — The Ricoh RDC-2S (1996) was the first digital camera with wireless image sharing, using the Personal Handy-phone System (PHS) mobile network.[ 194]
Wireless outdoor security sensor — In 1983, Japanese company OPTEX developed one of the first wireless outdoor security sensors.[ 896]
Yagi antenna — The Yagi-Uda antenna was invented in 1926 by Shintaro Uda of Tohoku Imperial University , Sendai , Japan, with the collaboration of Hidetsugu Yagi , also of Tohoku Imperial University.[ 897]
A lineup of JR East Shinkansen bullet trains in October 2012
Automatic ticket gate with face recognition system in Osaka Metro Morinomiya Station .
Nissan Altra EV (1997), the first battery electric vehicle (BEV) using lithium-ion batteries .
4-valve dual overhead camshaft (DOHC) — The Nissan Skyline GT-R (C10) , released in 1969, was the first production vehicle with a four-valve DOHC.[ 907]
4-wheel multi-link suspension — The Nissan Fairlady Z Model Z32 (1989) featured the first four-wheel multi-link suspension system .[ 907]
4-wheel steering (4WS) — Mazda were pioneers in applying four-wheel steering to automobiles , demonstrating it on their Mazda MX-02 (1984) concept car .[ 908]
5-speed automated manual transmission (AMT) — Isuzu Aska 's NAVi5 (1985) introduced the first 5-speed AMT.[ 910]
Active exhaust system — Introduced with the Mitsubishi 3000GT in 1991.[ 122]
Automatic car door — Introduced for Japanese taxi vehicles in 1964.[ 911]
Battery electric vehicle (BEV) with lithium-ion car battery — Nissan and Sony began researching lithium-ion batteries for automobiles in 1992, culminating in the Nissan Prairie Joy EV (1996), the first electric vehicle (EV) using lithium-ion batteries.[ 907]
Cam-shifting VVT — Between 1982 and 1989, Honda 's Ikuo Kajitani invented VTEC , a variable valve timing (VVT) technology. The VTEC system uses two (or occasionally three ) camshaft profiles and hydraulically selects between profiles.[ 913]
Common rail diesel truck — In 1995, the first mass production vehicle with common rail was the Hino Ranger truck, using the ECD-U2 common rail system developed by Denso .[ 915]
Diesel boxer engine — In January 2008, the Subaru EE engine became the world's first passenger car diesel boxer engine. This engine is a turbocharged boxer-four with common rail fuel injection .[ 916]
Dual-clutch transmission truck — In 2010, the Mitsubishi Fuso 6-speed Duonic transmission became the first dual-clutch transmission (DCT) to be used in a truck.[ 917]
Dual-mass flywheel (DMF) — Introduced with the Toyota Mark II in 1984.[ 918]
Electric SUV — The Toyota RAV4 EV , developed from 1995 to 1997, was the first electric sport utility vehicle (SUV).[ 919]
Fluoropolymer automotive paint — In 1988, Nissan introduced painting with fluorocarbon polymers .[ 907]
Fuel injection control — Introduced by Toyota and Nissan in 1971.[ 920]
Head restraint (head rest) — In 1968, Mazda Porter trucks and vans were the first production vehicles equipped with a head rest as standard equipment.[ 909]
Hybrid electric vehicle (HEV) — The first commercial hybrid vehicle was the Toyota Prius launched in 1997.[ 924]
Hydrogen car — In 2014, Toyota launched the first production hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, the Toyota Mirai .[ 928]
Insulated vehicle glass — In 1985, Nissan introduced insulated rear window glass to improve automotive air conditioning performance.[ 907]
Kei car (mini car) — A category of small automobiles , including passenger cars , vans and pickup trucks . They are designed for more affordable tax, insurance and parking costs in Japan.[ 929]
LED headlight — Toyota's Lexus LS 600h L , introduced in 2006, was the first production car with LED headlights.[ 932]
Low emission vehicle (LEV) – The first LEV was the Honda Civic in 1995.[ 933]
Miller cycle car engine — The Mazda Millenia (1993) was the world's first production car to employ a Miller cycle engine.[ 909]
Multi-rotary engine — Mazda Wankel engine (1960s) was the first twin rotary engine , commercialized with Mazda Cosmo Sports (1967). Mazda 's 20B (1987) was the first three-rotor engine. Mazda 13J (1987) was the first four-rotor engine.[ 909]
Modulated displacement (MD) — In 1982, Mitsubishi developed modulated displacement (MD), a form of variable displacement which proved that the technology, first used in Mitsubishi's 1.4 L 4G12 straight-four engine, can function successfully.[ 934]
Oxygen storage three-way catalyst — Introduced by Toyota in 1978.[ 935]
Parallel axis system — Introduced by the Hondamatic system with the Honda N360 AT (1968). The Hondamatic system is used in most Honda automatic and semi-automatic vehicles.[ 930]
Partial zero-emissions vehicle (PZEV) – The first PZEV was the Honda Civic GX in 2001. The first hybrid PZEV was the Honda Civic Hybrid in 2002.[ 933]
Plasma spark ignition system — Introduced by Nissan in 1982.[ 907]
Rear airbag — The Nissan President Model G50 (1993) introduced the first rear seat SRS airbag system, for the left-hand side (curbside) rear seat passenger .[ 907]
Selective catalytic reduction (SCR) — The first large-scale SCR was installed by IHI Corporation in 1978.[ 938]
Self-repair car paint — In 2005, Nissan introduced Scratch Guard Coat, the first clear exterior paint that can self-repair scratches.[ 907]
Semi-monocoque car — The Honda NSX (1990) was the first production car to feature an all-aluminium semi-monocoque .[ 939]
Torque vectoring — In 1996, Honda and Mitsubishi Motors released sports cars with torque vectoring systems. Torque vectoring differentials were originally used in auto racing . Mitsubishi rally cars were some of the earliest to use the technology.[ 940]
Triple-viscous four-wheel drive (4WD) — In January 1987, Nissan introduced the first triple-viscous full-time 4WD vehicles, with the Nissan Pulsar , Nissan EXA , Nissan Langley and Liberta Villa models.[ 907]
Variable-geometry turbocharger — Introduced by the Honda Legend Wing Turbo (1988).[ 941]
Vehicular automation
Water intercooler — Introduced with the Toyota M-TEU engine in 1983.[ 918]
Automotive electronics [ edit ]
The driver monitoring system (DMS) on Toyota 's Lexus LS 600h (2006)
42-volt electrical system (42V) — In 2001, the Toyota Crown Royal Saloon was the first production vehicle with 42V electrical system.[ 944]
Active noise control (ANC) — The Nissan Bluebird U13 (1991) was the first production vehicle with active noise control.[ 907]
Advanced driver-assistance system (ADAS)
Automatic air conditioner (automatic AC) — Introduced by Toyota and Nissan in 1971.[ 920]
Automotive engine microcomputer — The earliest microcomputer designed for an automobile was developed by Toshiba for Ford's Electronic Engine Control (EEC) in the early 1970s.[ 111]
Carputer — Electro Multi Vision , developed by Denso and Toyota, was an integrated computer system introduced for the 1985 Toyota Soarer and further developed for the 1987 Toyota Crown .[ 857] Electro Multi Vision introduced new features including:
Collision avoidance system (CAS) — Earliest CAS systems were Toyota 's Clearance Sonar (August 1989), Nissan 's Traffic Eye (December 1989), Isuzu 's system (1990), Hino 's Safety Eye (May 1992), and Mitsubishi 's Distance Warning (October 1992).[ 949]
Electronic control unit (ECU) — In the early 1970s, the Japanese electronics industry began producing integrated circuits and microcontrollers for controlling vehicle engines.[ 952]
Electronically adjustable suspension dampers — In 1981, the Nissan Skyline Turbo GT-ES introduced the first electronically adjustable suspension shock absorbers .[ 954]
Electronically controlled suspension (ECS) — The 1983 Toyota Soarer introduced Toyota Electronic Modulated Suspension (TEMS), the first electronically controlled car suspension .[ 918]
Electronically controlled anti-lock braking system (ABS) – ABS control was introduced by Toyota and Nissan in 1971.[ 920]
Electronically controlled continuously variable transmission (ECVT) — In early 1987, Subaru launched the Justy in Tokyo with an ECVT developed by Fuji Heavy Industries , which owns Subaru.[ 959]
Electronic stability control (ESC) – The 1971 Toyota Crown introduced Electronic Skid Control (ESC).[ 961]
Fully active suspension — The Toyota Celica (1989) introduced Toyota Active Control Suspension , the first fully active suspension without anti-roll bars .[ 918]
Keycard lock — In 1985, the Nissan Skyline (R31) introduced a car lock system that allows locking and unlocking with a card.[ 907]
Lane departure warning system (LDWS) — Introduced by Mitsubishi Motors with their Driver Support System (DSS) in 1998.[ 946]
LCD rear-view mirror — The Nissan Laurel C32 (1984) introduced an auto reflex room mirror using automatic anti-glare liquid-crystal display (LCD).[ 907]
Parking sensor — Toyota introduced ultrasonic Back Sonar on the 1982 Toyota Corona , the first production parking sensor, offering it until 1988.[ 965]
Pedestrian detection — In 2004, Honda introduced Intelligent Night Vision , the first system with pedestrian detection, on the Honda Legend .[ 966]
Power side-view mirror — The Nissan Laurel C32 (1984) introduced electric retractable side-view mirrors .[ 907]
Synchronized down shift rev-matching system (SynchroRev Match) — Invented by Nissan in 2008 for use on the Nissan 370Z and Fairlady Z .[ 967]
The Wakamiya conducted the world's first naval -launched air raids in 1914.
Honda CB750 (1969), the first superbike .
A Japanese taxi equipped with GPS navigation (2004).
QR code for the URL of the English Wikipedia mobile main page
Chindōgu is the Japanese art of inventing ingenious everyday gadgets that, on the face of it, seem like an ideal solution to a particular problem. However, Chindōgu has a distinctive feature: anyone actually attempting to use one of these inventions would find that it causes so many new problems, or such significant social embarrassment , that effectively it has no utility whatsoever. Thus, Chindōgu are sometimes described as "unuseless" – that is, they cannot be regarded as 'useless' in an absolute sense, since they do actually solve a problem; however, in practical terms, they cannot positively be called "useful". The term "Chindōgu" was coined by Kenji Kawakami .
Domestic appliances [ edit ]
An electric rice cooker .
Automatic faucet — In 1984, the first commercial hands-free automatic faucet was launched by Toto Ltd. [ 991]
Bladeless fan — The first bladeless fan was patented by Toshiba in 1981.[ 993]
Bread machine — The bread machine was developed and released in Japan in 1986 by the Matsushita Electric Industrial Company (Panasonic).[ 994]
Electric rice cooker — In the late 1940s, Mitsubishi Electric invented the first electric rice cooker. In 1955, Toshiba introduced the first automatic electric rice cooker.[ 995]
Electronic waste recycling plant — In 1999, Mitsubishi Electric opened the Higashihama Recycling Center, the first recycling plant for the household appliance industry.[ 214]
RFIQin — An automatic cooking device, invented by Mamoru Imura and patented in 2007.[ 996]
Ductless air conditioner (mini-split ) — In 1961, Toshiba introduced the first ductless mini-split air conditioner (AC).[ 997]
Dual flush toilet — In 1960, Toto developed the first dual flush toilet system.[ 999]
Helical air compressor — In 2000, Toshiba released the first AC with helical compressor, the Modular Multi System using R407C refrigerant .[ 997]
Individual quick freezing (IQF) — A quick freezer for whipped cream was developed by Norio Owada of Abi in the 1970s.[ 1001]
Inverter air conditioner (inverter AC) — In 1980, Toshiba released the first inverter AC, as an alternative to the standard home window AC.[ 111]
Japanese kitchen knife
Santoku — A general-purpose kitchen knife originating in Japan. This knife was created in the 1940s, known as the santoku bōchō .[ 1002]
Microwave oven with turntable — Between 1964 and 1966, Sharp Corporation introduced the first microwave oven with a turntable, an alternative means to promote more even heating of food.[ 264]
Numerical control straight stitch sewing machine — Introduced by Brother Industries in 1974.[ 866]
Plasma air purifier — Sharp Corporation 's Plasmacluster, developed between 1998 and 2000, was the first plasma air purifier.[ 97]
Stainless steel vacuum bottle — Nippon Sanso and Honda invented the first stainless steel vacuum flask with a double-layer structure and without glass. The product was launched in 1978.[ 972]
Timelapse of a 3D printer in action
3D printing — Invented by Hideo Kodama in the 1970s. In 1980, he invented two additive methods for fabricating 3D plastic models with photo-hardening thermoset polymer .[ 727]
Automatic photo print washer — In 1951, Noritsu founder Kan'ichi Nishimoto invented an automatic photo print washer by applying the principles behind a water wheel .[ 1004]
Color instant-print camera — The Fujifilm FinePix PR21 (1999) was the first digital camera with built-in color printer .[ 194]
Compact copier — The Fuji Xerox 2200 (1973) by Fujifilm was the first compact photocopier.[ 209]
Fuzzy logic copier — The Canon NP9800 (1990) was the first high-speed photocopier incorporating fuzzy logic.[ 196]
Digital printing — Seiko Epson 's EP-101 (1968) was the first compact digital printer .[ 367]
Inkjet printing — Inkjet printing technology was first extensively developed in the early 1950s at Canon Inc. While working at Canon, Ichiro Endo suggested the idea for a bubble jet printer .[ 1006]
Ise katagami — The use of stencils was known by the Nara period , as is evident from objects in the Shōsōin .[ 1007]
Multi-function printer (MFP) — The Canon PC Printer 70 (1984) combined a photocopier, printer, computer and monitor in an integrated unit. The Canon CLC800 (1994) combined a photocopier with a laser printer.[ 196]
Outer space printing — In 1998, the Epson Stylus Color 800 was the first color printer in space, launched on board the Space Shuttle Discovery .[ 1005]
Printer tracking dots — Developed in the mid-1980s by Canon, Fujifilm and Xerox .[ 1009]
Purikura (print club) — Conceived in 1994 by Sasaki Miho for Atlus , who released the first purikira arcade machine with Sega as Print Club in 1995.[ 1010]
Serial impact dot matrix printer — In 1968, Oki introduced the first serial impact dot matrix printer (SIDM), the Oki Wiredot. It supported a character generator for 128 characters with a print matrix of 7 × 5.[ 1011]
Thermal transfer printing — The SATO M-2311 (1981) was the first thermal transfer barcode printer .[ 1012]
Water transfer printing (hydrographics) — Invented in Japan. Taica Corporation claims to have invented cubic printing in 1974. However, the earliest hydrographic patent was filed by Motoyasu Nakanishi of Kabushiki Kaisha Cubic Engineering in 1982.[ 1013]
DER-01, a Japanese actroid (an android intended to be visually similar to humans).
Android — Waseda University initiated the WABOT project in 1967, and in 1972 completed the WABOT-1. It was the first android.[ 1014]
Actroid — DER 01 was developed by a Japanese research group, The Intelligent Robotics Lab, directed by Hiroshi Ishiguro at Osaka University, and Kokoro Co., Ltd.[ 1016]
Bipedal robot — Invented at University of Tokyo in 1967.[ 1017]
Climbing robots — Invented by Shigeo Hirose in 1979.[ 1018]
Demining robot — Invented by Shigeo Hirose in 1997.[ 1018]
Giant boarding robot — Kuratas , revealed in 2012, was described as the first giant boarding robot , modelled after the mechs from mecha anime and manga .[ 1020]
Intelligent robot — In 1970, Hitachi researchers invented an intelligent assembly robot for factory automation . A computer with image processor was used for machine vision .[ 261]
Medical robot nurse — The first was RIBA (Robot for Interactive Body Assistance), developed by Riken and Tokai Rubber Industries (TRI) in 2009.[ 1022]
Mole robot — In 2001, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) developed the first non-soil discharge mole robot, used to install a conduit without excavation.[ 281]
Karakuri puppet — Karakuri puppets (からくり人形 , karakuri ningyō ) are traditional Japanese mechanized puppets or automata , originally made from the 17th century to the 19th century. The word karakuri means "mechanisms" or "trick".[ 1023]
Robotic exoskeleton for motion support (medicine) — The first Hybrid Assistive Limb (HAL) prototype was proposed by Yoshiyuki Sankai , a professor at Tsukuba University.[ 1024]
Running humanoid robot — Sony 's QRIO (2003) was the first humanoid robot capable of running.[ 106]
Snake robot — Invented by Shigeo Hirose in 1972.[ 1026]
Soft robotics — Shigeo Hirose invented the first soft robotic gripper in 1977.[ 1027]
Toy robot arm — Tomy 's Armatron , introduced in 1982, was the first toy robot arm, moved by dual analog control joysticks . It had a significant influence on the development of modern robotics and artificial intelligence .[ 1028]
Wind-up toy robot — Lilliput, a Japanese robot introduced in 1932, was the first wind-up toy robot.[ 1029]
Katana
Model B in Pink
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