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CameraCreatorsSonyTech

IMX908 gives Sony’s STARVIS 3 lineup a 4K HDR security boost

Sony’s new IMX908 4K STARVIS 3 sensor targets blown‑out highlights, muddy shadows, and motion artifacts in one compact security‑focused package.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 20, 2026, 8:03 AM EDT
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Close-up product shot of the Sony IMX908 4K image sensor, showing a rectangular blue-green sensor die centered on a dark brown package against a clean white background with a soft reflection below.
Image: Sony
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Sony is pushing hard on the idea that security cameras should see more like the human eye—and in some situations, better. With the new IMX908 4K CMOS image sensor, the company is bringing its latest STARVIS 3 and LOFIC tech into a compact security-focused chip that’s built to handle brutal lighting, from blown‑out entrances to dim alleys, without turning faces and license plates into useless smears of light or noise.

At the heart of the announcement is a very specific problem: traditional security cameras are notoriously bad at mixed lighting. Think of a lobby where bright daylight pours through glass doors while the rest of the scene sits in shadow, or a street where headlights, neon signs, and dark corners all collide in a single frame. Conventional sensors typically rely on multi‑exposure HDR—rapidly capturing several frames at different exposures and merging them—which helps recover detail but often introduces artifacts like ghosting, weird color shifts, and soft edges, especially when people or cars are moving through the scene. Sony’s IMX908 takes a different route by delivering up to 96dB of dynamic range from a single exposure, significantly cutting down those motion‑related artifacts while still keeping detail in both highlights and shadows.

Physically, the IMX908 is a 1/2.8‑type, 4K‑class sensor with around 8.4 effective megapixels, outputting a maximum resolution of 3,856 × 2,180 pixels. It uses 1.45µm pixels based on Sony’s LOFIC (Lateral Overflow Integration Capacitor) structure, which is essentially a clever way of increasing the amount of charge each pixel can hold before clipping, without having to bump up pixel size or sacrifice resolution. Sony claims these LOFIC pixels can handle nearly 20 times the saturated charge of its previous IMX778 security sensor while also improving low‑light performance by about 27%, giving the new chip both more highlight headroom and better sensitivity in dark scenes.

On paper, that translates directly into what security operators and AI systems actually care about: usable information. With more saturated charge capacity, bright areas like headlights, shop windows, or backlit doorways are less likely to blow out into white blobs, preserving texture and structure around faces, clothing, and vehicle details. At the same time, that low‑light improvement helps the sensor retain shadow detail and suppress noise in dim areas—those corners where suspicious activity tends to happen—without needing extreme gain that turns video into a grainy mess. The end result is a single 4K frame where both extremes of the scene remain usable for human operators and machine vision models.

Sony is very clear that this is a security‑camera part, not a smartphone or mirrorless sensor, but the technology direction is telling. The IMX908 sits under the STARVIS 3 umbrella, Sony’s latest generation of back‑illuminated pixels tuned for surveillance, with a design that boosts sensitivity and dynamic range beyond earlier STARVIS and STARVIS 2 parts of similar size. STARVIS sensors are already widely deployed across CCTV, traffic cameras, and industrial monitoring because they perform unusually well in near‑dark conditions, and STARVIS 3 pushes that further by achieving a wide dynamic range in a single shot—exactly what the IMX908 is exploiting with its single‑exposure HDR approach.

Single‑exposure HDR is really the headline feature here, even more than “4K.” Rather than capturing multiple exposures and compositing them, the IMX908 uses its LOFIC pixel architecture and internal processing to capture all the required dynamic range in one go, then supports various HDR modes such as Clear HDR, Clear HDR3, Hybrid HDR3, and DOL configurations for different system designs. For camera makers, that means fewer motion artifacts to clean up in software and a more predictable signal for downstream AI workloads that depend on stable edges and consistent color for detection and recognition. For end users, it means less of that familiar haloing and color fringing around moving subjects when HDR is enabled.

From a deployment perspective, the IMX908 looks designed to drop into a wide range of modern network cameras. The sensor supports up to 90 fps at 10‑bit output and 60 fps at 12‑bit, which gives manufacturers flexibility depending on whether they want higher temporal resolution for fast‑moving traffic or richer tonal detail for analytics‑heavy indoor systems. It uses a MIPI D‑PHY 2/4‑lane output interface and runs off typical security‑sensor power rails (around 1.1, 1.8, and 3.3 V), which should make it relatively straightforward to integrate into existing ISP and SoC platforms already tuned for Sony security sensors. The sensor is packaged in a compact ceramic LGA with AR coating, keeping the overall module size in check for more discreet camera designs.

Sony also positions the IMX908 as part of a broader push toward higher‑precision recognition in public and private spaces. As AI‑based analytics become standard—counting people, detecting anomalies, reading plates, identifying behaviors—the quality of the pixels feeding those models becomes a competitive differentiator. If your sensor clips half the scene to pure white or drowns it in noise, even the best model will struggle; if it preserves fine detail across a wide dynamic range, detection confidence and usefulness go up. This is why Sony repeatedly ties the IMX908 to “improved recognition accuracy” rather than just prettier video, framing it as infrastructure for smarter cities, transportation systems, and enterprise security.

What’s also interesting, especially for anyone tracking imaging trends beyond security, is how LOFIC and STARVIS 3 seem to be spreading across product lines. Coverage of the IMX908 notes that similar LOFIC‑based architectures are appearing in other categories, including large smartphone sensors, hinting that Sony sees this as a general strategy for pushing dynamic range without sacrificing compactness. Historically, techniques developed for surveillance and industrial imaging—high sensitivity, better HDR, low‑noise electronics—have eventually trickled into consumer cameras and phones, and the IMX908 looks like part of that same pipeline.

For now, though, the chip is firmly aimed at professional surveillance. Sony lists the IMX908 under its security sensor portfolio, with sample shipments planned for the end of March 2026—meaning camera makers can start prototyping soon, but it will likely be some time before end‑users see products powered by it in the field. When those cameras do arrive, they will slot into a market that is already heavily relying on Sony STARVIS parts, so upgrades could be incremental at the system level—better night footage, cleaner HDR, more reliable analytics—rather than flashy spec‑sheet leaps.

If you zoom out, IMX908 is less about chasing more megapixels and more about making every pixel smarter. The sensor keeps resolution at a sensible 4K, focuses instead on squeezing more usable information out of compact 1.45µm pixels, and leans into single‑exposure HDR with LOFIC to solve real‑world problems like glare, deep shadow, and motion‑induced artifacts. For a category where “did the camera actually capture what happened?” is more important than any marketing buzzword, that is exactly the kind of evolution that matters.


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