12,289 research outputs found
Human Motion Trajectory Prediction: A Survey
With growing numbers of intelligent autonomous systems in human environments,
the ability of such systems to perceive, understand and anticipate human
behavior becomes increasingly important. Specifically, predicting future
positions of dynamic agents and planning considering such predictions are key
tasks for self-driving vehicles, service robots and advanced surveillance
systems. This paper provides a survey of human motion trajectory prediction. We
review, analyze and structure a large selection of work from different
communities and propose a taxonomy that categorizes existing methods based on
the motion modeling approach and level of contextual information used. We
provide an overview of the existing datasets and performance metrics. We
discuss limitations of the state of the art and outline directions for further
research.Comment: Submitted to the International Journal of Robotics Research (IJRR),
37 page
The highD Dataset: A Drone Dataset of Naturalistic Vehicle Trajectories on German Highways for Validation of Highly Automated Driving Systems
Scenario-based testing for the safety validation of highly automated vehicles
is a promising approach that is being examined in research and industry. This
approach heavily relies on data from real-world scenarios to derive the
necessary scenario information for testing. Measurement data should be
collected at a reasonable effort, contain naturalistic behavior of road users
and include all data relevant for a description of the identified scenarios in
sufficient quality. However, the current measurement methods fail to meet at
least one of the requirements. Thus, we propose a novel method to measure data
from an aerial perspective for scenario-based validation fulfilling the
mentioned requirements. Furthermore, we provide a large-scale naturalistic
vehicle trajectory dataset from German highways called highD. We evaluate the
data in terms of quantity, variety and contained scenarios. Our dataset
consists of 16.5 hours of measurements from six locations with 110 000
vehicles, a total driven distance of 45 000 km and 5600 recorded complete lane
changes. The highD dataset is available online at: http://www.highD-dataset.comComment: IEEE International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems
(ITSC) 201
SINet: A Scale-insensitive Convolutional Neural Network for Fast Vehicle Detection
Vision-based vehicle detection approaches achieve incredible success in
recent years with the development of deep convolutional neural network (CNN).
However, existing CNN based algorithms suffer from the problem that the
convolutional features are scale-sensitive in object detection task but it is
common that traffic images and videos contain vehicles with a large variance of
scales. In this paper, we delve into the source of scale sensitivity, and
reveal two key issues: 1) existing RoI pooling destroys the structure of small
scale objects, 2) the large intra-class distance for a large variance of scales
exceeds the representation capability of a single network. Based on these
findings, we present a scale-insensitive convolutional neural network (SINet)
for fast detecting vehicles with a large variance of scales. First, we present
a context-aware RoI pooling to maintain the contextual information and original
structure of small scale objects. Second, we present a multi-branch decision
network to minimize the intra-class distance of features. These lightweight
techniques bring zero extra time complexity but prominent detection accuracy
improvement. The proposed techniques can be equipped with any deep network
architectures and keep them trained end-to-end. Our SINet achieves
state-of-the-art performance in terms of accuracy and speed (up to 37 FPS) on
the KITTI benchmark and a new highway dataset, which contains a large variance
of scales and extremely small objects.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems
(T-ITS
Robust Dense Mapping for Large-Scale Dynamic Environments
We present a stereo-based dense mapping algorithm for large-scale dynamic
urban environments. In contrast to other existing methods, we simultaneously
reconstruct the static background, the moving objects, and the potentially
moving but currently stationary objects separately, which is desirable for
high-level mobile robotic tasks such as path planning in crowded environments.
We use both instance-aware semantic segmentation and sparse scene flow to
classify objects as either background, moving, or potentially moving, thereby
ensuring that the system is able to model objects with the potential to
transition from static to dynamic, such as parked cars. Given camera poses
estimated from visual odometry, both the background and the (potentially)
moving objects are reconstructed separately by fusing the depth maps computed
from the stereo input. In addition to visual odometry, sparse scene flow is
also used to estimate the 3D motions of the detected moving objects, in order
to reconstruct them accurately. A map pruning technique is further developed to
improve reconstruction accuracy and reduce memory consumption, leading to
increased scalability. We evaluate our system thoroughly on the well-known
KITTI dataset. Our system is capable of running on a PC at approximately 2.5Hz,
with the primary bottleneck being the instance-aware semantic segmentation,
which is a limitation we hope to address in future work. The source code is
available from the project website (http://andreibarsan.github.io/dynslam).Comment: Presented at IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation
(ICRA), 201
- …