10,467 research outputs found
Recognizing Objects In-the-wild: Where Do We Stand?
The ability to recognize objects is an essential skill for a robotic system
acting in human-populated environments. Despite decades of effort from the
robotic and vision research communities, robots are still missing good visual
perceptual systems, preventing the use of autonomous agents for real-world
applications. The progress is slowed down by the lack of a testbed able to
accurately represent the world perceived by the robot in-the-wild. In order to
fill this gap, we introduce a large-scale, multi-view object dataset collected
with an RGB-D camera mounted on a mobile robot. The dataset embeds the
challenges faced by a robot in a real-life application and provides a useful
tool for validating object recognition algorithms. Besides describing the
characteristics of the dataset, the paper evaluates the performance of a
collection of well-established deep convolutional networks on the new dataset
and analyzes the transferability of deep representations from Web images to
robotic data. Despite the promising results obtained with such representations,
the experiments demonstrate that object classification with real-life robotic
data is far from being solved. Finally, we provide a comparative study to
analyze and highlight the open challenges in robot vision, explaining the
discrepancies in the performance
Local Motion Planner for Autonomous Navigation in Vineyards with a RGB-D Camera-Based Algorithm and Deep Learning Synergy
With the advent of agriculture 3.0 and 4.0, researchers are increasingly
focusing on the development of innovative smart farming and precision
agriculture technologies by introducing automation and robotics into the
agricultural processes. Autonomous agricultural field machines have been
gaining significant attention from farmers and industries to reduce costs,
human workload, and required resources. Nevertheless, achieving sufficient
autonomous navigation capabilities requires the simultaneous cooperation of
different processes; localization, mapping, and path planning are just some of
the steps that aim at providing to the machine the right set of skills to
operate in semi-structured and unstructured environments. In this context, this
study presents a low-cost local motion planner for autonomous navigation in
vineyards based only on an RGB-D camera, low range hardware, and a dual layer
control algorithm. The first algorithm exploits the disparity map and its depth
representation to generate a proportional control for the robotic platform.
Concurrently, a second back-up algorithm, based on representations learning and
resilient to illumination variations, can take control of the machine in case
of a momentaneous failure of the first block. Moreover, due to the double
nature of the system, after initial training of the deep learning model with an
initial dataset, the strict synergy between the two algorithms opens the
possibility of exploiting new automatically labeled data, coming from the
field, to extend the existing model knowledge. The machine learning algorithm
has been trained and tested, using transfer learning, with acquired images
during different field surveys in the North region of Italy and then optimized
for on-device inference with model pruning and quantization. Finally, the
overall system has been validated with a customized robot platform in the
relevant environment
End-to-End Tracking and Semantic Segmentation Using Recurrent Neural Networks
In this work we present a novel end-to-end framework for tracking and
classifying a robot's surroundings in complex, dynamic and only partially
observable real-world environments. The approach deploys a recurrent neural
network to filter an input stream of raw laser measurements in order to
directly infer object locations, along with their identity in both visible and
occluded areas. To achieve this we first train the network using unsupervised
Deep Tracking, a recently proposed theoretical framework for end-to-end space
occupancy prediction. We show that by learning to track on a large amount of
unsupervised data, the network creates a rich internal representation of its
environment which we in turn exploit through the principle of inductive
transfer of knowledge to perform the task of it's semantic classification. As a
result, we show that only a small amount of labelled data suffices to steer the
network towards mastering this additional task. Furthermore we propose a novel
recurrent neural network architecture specifically tailored to tracking and
semantic classification in real-world robotics applications. We demonstrate the
tracking and classification performance of the method on real-world data
collected at a busy road junction. Our evaluation shows that the proposed
end-to-end framework compares favourably to a state-of-the-art, model-free
tracking solution and that it outperforms a conventional one-shot training
scheme for semantic classification
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