7,102 research outputs found
Dense Piecewise Planar RGB-D SLAM for Indoor Environments
The paper exploits weak Manhattan constraints to parse the structure of
indoor environments from RGB-D video sequences in an online setting. We extend
the previous approach for single view parsing of indoor scenes to video
sequences and formulate the problem of recovering the floor plan of the
environment as an optimal labeling problem solved using dynamic programming.
The temporal continuity is enforced in a recursive setting, where labeling from
previous frames is used as a prior term in the objective function. In addition
to recovery of piecewise planar weak Manhattan structure of the extended
environment, the orthogonality constraints are also exploited by visual
odometry and pose graph optimization. This yields reliable estimates in the
presence of large motions and absence of distinctive features to track. We
evaluate our method on several challenging indoors sequences demonstrating
accurate SLAM and dense mapping of low texture environments. On existing TUM
benchmark we achieve competitive results with the alternative approaches which
fail in our environments.Comment: International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS)
201
Keyframe-based monocular SLAM: design, survey, and future directions
Extensive research in the field of monocular SLAM for the past fifteen years
has yielded workable systems that found their way into various applications in
robotics and augmented reality. Although filter-based monocular SLAM systems
were common at some time, the more efficient keyframe-based solutions are
becoming the de facto methodology for building a monocular SLAM system. The
objective of this paper is threefold: first, the paper serves as a guideline
for people seeking to design their own monocular SLAM according to specific
environmental constraints. Second, it presents a survey that covers the various
keyframe-based monocular SLAM systems in the literature, detailing the
components of their implementation, and critically assessing the specific
strategies made in each proposed solution. Third, the paper provides insight
into the direction of future research in this field, to address the major
limitations still facing monocular SLAM; namely, in the issues of illumination
changes, initialization, highly dynamic motion, poorly textured scenes,
repetitive textures, map maintenance, and failure recovery
Plane extraction for indoor place recognition
In this paper, we present an image based plane extraction
method well suited for real-time operations. Our approach exploits the
assumption that the surrounding scene is mainly composed by planes
disposed in known directions. Planes are detected from a single image
exploiting a voting scheme that takes into account the vanishing lines.
Then, candidate planes are validated and merged using a region grow-
ing based approach to detect in real-time planes inside an unknown in-
door environment. Using the related plane homographies is possible to
remove the perspective distortion, enabling standard place recognition
algorithms to work in an invariant point of view setup. Quantitative Ex-
periments performed with real world images show the effectiveness of our
approach compared with a very popular method
General Dynamic Scene Reconstruction from Multiple View Video
This paper introduces a general approach to dynamic scene reconstruction from
multiple moving cameras without prior knowledge or limiting constraints on the
scene structure, appearance, or illumination. Existing techniques for dynamic
scene reconstruction from multiple wide-baseline camera views primarily focus
on accurate reconstruction in controlled environments, where the cameras are
fixed and calibrated and background is known. These approaches are not robust
for general dynamic scenes captured with sparse moving cameras. Previous
approaches for outdoor dynamic scene reconstruction assume prior knowledge of
the static background appearance and structure. The primary contributions of
this paper are twofold: an automatic method for initial coarse dynamic scene
segmentation and reconstruction without prior knowledge of background
appearance or structure; and a general robust approach for joint segmentation
refinement and dense reconstruction of dynamic scenes from multiple
wide-baseline static or moving cameras. Evaluation is performed on a variety of
indoor and outdoor scenes with cluttered backgrounds and multiple dynamic
non-rigid objects such as people. Comparison with state-of-the-art approaches
demonstrates improved accuracy in both multiple view segmentation and dense
reconstruction. The proposed approach also eliminates the requirement for prior
knowledge of scene structure and appearance
Recurrent Scene Parsing with Perspective Understanding in the Loop
Objects may appear at arbitrary scales in perspective images of a scene,
posing a challenge for recognition systems that process images at a fixed
resolution. We propose a depth-aware gating module that adaptively selects the
pooling field size in a convolutional network architecture according to the
object scale (inversely proportional to the depth) so that small details are
preserved for distant objects while larger receptive fields are used for those
nearby. The depth gating signal is provided by stereo disparity or estimated
directly from monocular input. We integrate this depth-aware gating into a
recurrent convolutional neural network to perform semantic segmentation. Our
recurrent module iteratively refines the segmentation results, leveraging the
depth and semantic predictions from the previous iterations.
Through extensive experiments on four popular large-scale RGB-D datasets, we
demonstrate this approach achieves competitive semantic segmentation
performance with a model which is substantially more compact. We carry out
extensive analysis of this architecture including variants that operate on
monocular RGB but use depth as side-information during training, unsupervised
gating as a generic attentional mechanism, and multi-resolution gating. We find
that gated pooling for joint semantic segmentation and depth yields
state-of-the-art results for quantitative monocular depth estimation
Intelligent multi-sensor integrations
Growth in the intelligence of space systems requires the use and integration of data from multiple sensors. Generic tools are being developed for extracting and integrating information obtained from multiple sources. The full spectrum is addressed for issues ranging from data acquisition, to characterization of sensor data, to adaptive systems for utilizing the data. In particular, there are three major aspects to the project, multisensor processing, an adaptive approach to object recognition, and distributed sensor system integration
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