23,985 research outputs found
MOMA: Visual Mobile Marker Odometry
In this paper, we present a cooperative odometry scheme based on the
detection of mobile markers in line with the idea of cooperative positioning
for multiple robots [1]. To this end, we introduce a simple optimization scheme
that realizes visual mobile marker odometry via accurate fixed marker-based
camera positioning and analyse the characteristics of errors inherent to the
method compared to classical fixed marker-based navigation and visual odometry.
In addition, we provide a specific UAV-UGV configuration that allows for
continuous movements of the UAV without doing stops and a minimal
caterpillar-like configuration that works with one UGV alone. Finally, we
present a real-world implementation and evaluation for the proposed UAV-UGV
configuration
This Far, No Further: Introducing Virtual Borders to Mobile Robots Using a Laser Pointer
We address the problem of controlling the workspace of a 3-DoF mobile robot.
In a human-robot shared space, robots should navigate in a human-acceptable way
according to the users' demands. For this purpose, we employ virtual borders,
that are non-physical borders, to allow a user the restriction of the robot's
workspace. To this end, we propose an interaction method based on a laser
pointer to intuitively define virtual borders. This interaction method uses a
previously developed framework based on robot guidance to change the robot's
navigational behavior. Furthermore, we extend this framework to increase the
flexibility by considering different types of virtual borders, i.e. polygons
and curves separating an area. We evaluated our method with 15 non-expert users
concerning correctness, accuracy and teaching time. The experimental results
revealed a high accuracy and linear teaching time with respect to the border
length while correctly incorporating the borders into the robot's navigational
map. Finally, our user study showed that non-expert users can employ our
interaction method.Comment: Accepted at 2019 Third IEEE International Conference on Robotic
Computing (IRC), supplementary video: https://youtu.be/lKsGp8xtyI
Monocular navigation for long-term autonomy
We present a reliable and robust monocular navigation system for an autonomous vehicle.
The proposed method is computationally efficient, needs off-the-shelf equipment only and does not require any additional infrastructure like radio beacons or GPS.
Contrary to traditional localization algorithms, which use advanced mathematical methods to determine vehicle position, our method uses a more practical approach.
In our case, an image-feature-based monocular vision technique determines only the heading of the vehicle while the vehicle's odometry is used to estimate the distance traveled.
We present a mathematical proof and experimental evidence indicating that the localization error of a robot guided by this principle is bound.
The experiments demonstrate that the method can cope with variable illumination, lighting deficiency and both short- and long-term environment changes.
This makes the method especially suitable for deployment in scenarios which require long-term autonomous operation
Topomap: Topological Mapping and Navigation Based on Visual SLAM Maps
Visual robot navigation within large-scale, semi-structured environments
deals with various challenges such as computation intensive path planning
algorithms or insufficient knowledge about traversable spaces. Moreover, many
state-of-the-art navigation approaches only operate locally instead of gaining
a more conceptual understanding of the planning objective. This limits the
complexity of tasks a robot can accomplish and makes it harder to deal with
uncertainties that are present in the context of real-time robotics
applications. In this work, we present Topomap, a framework which simplifies
the navigation task by providing a map to the robot which is tailored for path
planning use. This novel approach transforms a sparse feature-based map from a
visual Simultaneous Localization And Mapping (SLAM) system into a
three-dimensional topological map. This is done in two steps. First, we extract
occupancy information directly from the noisy sparse point cloud. Then, we
create a set of convex free-space clusters, which are the vertices of the
topological map. We show that this representation improves the efficiency of
global planning, and we provide a complete derivation of our algorithm.
Planning experiments on real world datasets demonstrate that we achieve similar
performance as RRT* with significantly lower computation times and storage
requirements. Finally, we test our algorithm on a mobile robotic platform to
prove its advantages.Comment: 8 page
Navigation without localisation: reliable teach and repeat based on the convergence theorem
We present a novel concept for teach-and-repeat visual navigation. The
proposed concept is based on a mathematical model, which indicates that in
teach-and-repeat navigation scenarios, mobile robots do not need to perform
explicit localisation. Rather than that, a mobile robot which repeats a
previously taught path can simply `replay' the learned velocities, while using
its camera information only to correct its heading relative to the intended
path. To support our claim, we establish a position error model of a robot,
which traverses a taught path by only correcting its heading. Then, we outline
a mathematical proof which shows that this position error does not diverge over
time. Based on the insights from the model, we present a simple monocular
teach-and-repeat navigation method. The method is computationally efficient, it
does not require camera calibration, and it can learn and autonomously traverse
arbitrarily-shaped paths. In a series of experiments, we demonstrate that the
method can reliably guide mobile robots in realistic indoor and outdoor
conditions, and can cope with imperfect odometry, landmark deficiency,
illumination variations and naturally-occurring environment changes.
Furthermore, we provide the navigation system and the datasets gathered at
http://www.github.com/gestom/stroll_bearnav.Comment: The paper will be presented at IROS 2018 in Madri
Virtual Borders: Accurate Definition of a Mobile Robot's Workspace Using Augmented Reality
We address the problem of interactively controlling the workspace of a mobile
robot to ensure a human-aware navigation. This is especially of relevance for
non-expert users living in human-robot shared spaces, e.g. home environments,
since they want to keep the control of their mobile robots, such as vacuum
cleaning or companion robots. Therefore, we introduce virtual borders that are
respected by a robot while performing its tasks. For this purpose, we employ a
RGB-D Google Tango tablet as human-robot interface in combination with an
augmented reality application to flexibly define virtual borders. We evaluated
our system with 15 non-expert users concerning accuracy, teaching time and
correctness and compared the results with other baseline methods based on
visual markers and a laser pointer. The experimental results show that our
method features an equally high accuracy while reducing the teaching time
significantly compared to the baseline methods. This holds for different border
lengths, shapes and variations in the teaching process. Finally, we
demonstrated the correctness of the approach, i.e. the mobile robot changes its
navigational behavior according to the user-defined virtual borders.Comment: Accepted on 2018 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent
Robots and Systems (IROS), supplementary video: https://youtu.be/oQO8sQ0JBR
Long-term experiments with an adaptive spherical view representation for navigation in changing environments
Real-world environments such as houses and offices change over time, meaning that a mobile robot’s map will become out of date. In this work, we introduce a method to update the reference views in a hybrid metric-topological map so that a mobile robot can continue to localize itself in a changing environment. The updating mechanism, based on the multi-store model of human memory, incorporates a spherical metric representation of the observed visual features for each node in the map, which enables the robot to estimate its heading and navigate using multi-view geometry, as well as representing the local 3D geometry of the environment. A series of experiments demonstrate the persistence performance of the proposed system in real changing environments, including analysis of the long-term stability
Simple yet stable bearing-only navigation
This article describes a simple monocular navigation system for a mobile robot based on the map-and-replay technique. The presented method is robust and easy to implement and does not require sensor calibration or structured environment, and its computational complexity is independent of the environment size. The method can navigate a robot while sensing only one landmark at a time, making it more robust than other monocular approaches. The aforementioned properties of the method allow even low-cost robots to effectively act in large outdoor and indoor environments with natural landmarks only. The basic idea is to utilize a monocular vision to correct only the robot's heading, leaving distance measurements to the odometry. The heading correction itself can suppress the odometric error and prevent the overall position error from diverging. The influence of a map-based heading estimation and odometric errors on the overall position uncertainty is examined. A claim is stated that for closed polygonal trajectories, the position error of this type of navigation does not diverge. The claim is defended mathematically and experimentally. The method has been experimentally tested in a set of indoor and outdoor experiments, during which the average position errors have been lower than 0.3 m for paths more than 1 km long
Simultaneous localization and map-building using active vision
An active approach to sensing can provide the focused measurement capability over a wide field of view which allows correctly formulated Simultaneous Localization and Map-Building (SLAM) to be implemented with vision, permitting repeatable long-term localization using only naturally occurring, automatically-detected features. In this paper, we present the first example of a general system for autonomous localization using active vision, enabled here by a high-performance stereo head, addressing such issues as uncertainty-based measurement selection, automatic map-maintenance, and goal-directed steering. We present varied real-time experiments in a complex environment.Published versio
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