3,375 research outputs found
Evaluating indoor positioning systems in a shopping mall : the lessons learned from the IPIN 2018 competition
The Indoor Positioning and Indoor Navigation (IPIN) conference holds an annual competition in which indoor localization systems from different research groups worldwide are evaluated empirically. The objective of this competition is to establish a systematic evaluation methodology with rigorous metrics both for real-time (on-site) and post-processing (off-site) situations, in a realistic environment unfamiliar to the prototype developers. For the IPIN 2018 conference, this competition was held on September 22nd, 2018, in Atlantis, a large shopping mall in Nantes (France). Four competition tracks (two on-site and two off-site) were designed. They consisted of several 1 km routes traversing several floors of the mall. Along these paths, 180 points were topographically surveyed with a 10 cm accuracy, to serve as ground truth landmarks, combining theodolite measurements, differential global navigation satellite system (GNSS) and 3D scanner systems. 34 teams effectively competed. The accuracy score corresponds to the third quartile (75th percentile) of an error metric that combines the horizontal positioning error and the floor detection. The best results for the on-site tracks showed an accuracy score of 11.70 m (Track 1) and 5.50 m (Track 2), while the best results for the off-site tracks showed an accuracy score of 0.90 m (Track 3) and 1.30 m (Track 4). These results showed that it is possible to obtain high accuracy indoor positioning solutions in large, realistic environments using wearable light-weight sensors without deploying any beacon. This paper describes the organization work of the tracks, analyzes the methodology used to quantify the results, reviews the lessons learned from the competition and discusses its future
Reflectance Intensity Assisted Automatic and Accurate Extrinsic Calibration of 3D LiDAR and Panoramic Camera Using a Printed Chessboard
This paper presents a novel method for fully automatic and convenient
extrinsic calibration of a 3D LiDAR and a panoramic camera with a normally
printed chessboard. The proposed method is based on the 3D corner estimation of
the chessboard from the sparse point cloud generated by one frame scan of the
LiDAR. To estimate the corners, we formulate a full-scale model of the
chessboard and fit it to the segmented 3D points of the chessboard. The model
is fitted by optimizing the cost function under constraints of correlation
between the reflectance intensity of laser and the color of the chessboard's
patterns. Powell's method is introduced for resolving the discontinuity problem
in optimization. The corners of the fitted model are considered as the 3D
corners of the chessboard. Once the corners of the chessboard in the 3D point
cloud are estimated, the extrinsic calibration of the two sensors is converted
to a 3D-2D matching problem. The corresponding 3D-2D points are used to
calculate the absolute pose of the two sensors with Unified Perspective-n-Point
(UPnP). Further, the calculated parameters are regarded as initial values and
are refined using the Levenberg-Marquardt method. The performance of the
proposed corner detection method from the 3D point cloud is evaluated using
simulations. The results of experiments, conducted on a Velodyne HDL-32e LiDAR
and a Ladybug3 camera under the proposed re-projection error metric,
qualitatively and quantitatively demonstrate the accuracy and stability of the
final extrinsic calibration parameters.Comment: 20 pages, submitted to the journal of Remote Sensin
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