137 research outputs found
Interest point detectors for visual SLAM
In this paper we present several interest points detectors and we analyze their suitability when used as landmark extractors for vision-based simultaneous localization and mapping (vSLAM). For this purpose, we evaluate the detectors according to their repeatability under changes in viewpoint and scale. These are the desired requirements for visual landmarks. Several experiments were carried out using sequence of images captured with high precision. The sequences represent planar objects as well as 3D scenes
Self-positioning and mapping of rectangular rooms with sectorized narrowband antennas
A system for simultaneous 2D estimation of rectangular room and transceiver localization is proposed. The system is based on two radio transceivers, both capable of full duplex operations (simultaneous transmission and reception). This property enables measurements of channel impulse response (CIR) at the same place the signal is transmitted (generated), commonly known as self-to-self CIR. Another novelty of the proposed system is the spatial CIR discrimination that is possible with the receiver antenna design which consists of eight sectorized antennas with 45° aperture in the horizontal plane and total coverage equal to the isotropic one. The dimensions of a rectangular room are reconstructed directly from spatial radio impulse responses by extracting the information regarding round trip time (RTT). Using radar approach estimation of walls and corners positions is derived. Tests using measured data were performed, and the simulation results confirm the feasibility of the approach
Implementation of a Campus wide DGPS Data Server
Although the Navigation Satellite Timing and Ranging (NAVSTAR) Global Positioning
System (GPS) is, de facto, the standard positioning system used in outdoor navigation, it
does not provide, per se, all the features required to perform many outdoor navigational
tasks. The accuracy of the GPS measurements is the most critical issue. The quest for
higher position readings accuracy led to the development, in the late nineties, of the
Differential Global Positioning System (DGPS). The differential GPS method detects
the range errors of the GPS satellites received and broadcasts them. The DGPS/GPS
receivers correlate the DGPS data with the GPS satellite data they are receiving,
granting users increased accuracy. DGPS data is broadcasted using terrestrial radio
beacons, satellites and, more recently, the Internet. Our goal is to have access, within the
ISEP campus, to DGPS correction data.
To achieve this objective we designed and implemented a distributed system
composed of two main modules which are interconnected: a distributed application
responsible for the establishment of the data link over the Internet between the remote
DGPS stations and the campus, and the campus-wide DGPS data server application.
The DGPS data Internet link is provided by a two-tier client/server distributed
application where the server-side is connected to the DGPS station and the client-side is
located at the campus. The second unit, the campus DGPS data server application,
diffuses DGPS data received at the campus via the Intranet and via a wireless data link.
The wireless broadcast is intended for DGPS/GPS portable receivers equipped with an
air interface and the Intranet link is provided for DGPS/GPS receivers with just a RS232
DGPS data interface. While the DGPS data Internet link servers receive the DGPS data
from the DGPS base stations and forward it to the DGPS data Internet link client, the
DGPS data Internet link client outputs the received DGPS data to the campus DGPS
data server application. The distributed system is expected to provide adequate support
for accurate (sub-metric) outdoor campus navigation tasks. This paper describes in
detail the overall distributed application
Recommended from our members
Design, architecture and control of a mobile site-modeling robot
A distributed, modular, heterogeneous architecture is presented that illustrates an approach to solving and integrating common tasks in mobile robotics, such as path planning, localization, sensor fusion, environmental modeling, and motion control. Experimental results are shown for an autonomous navigation task to confirm the applicability of our approach
A Real-Time Robust Global Localization for Autonomous Mobile Robots in Large Environments
International audienceGlobal localization aims to estimate a robot's pose in a learned map without any prior knowledge of its initial pose. Achieving highly accurate global localization remains a challenge for autonomous mobile robots especially in large-scale unstructured outdoor environments. This paper introduces a real-time reliable global localization approach with the capability of addressing the kidnapped robot problem using only laser sensors. Our approach includes four steps: 1) local Simultaneous Localization and Mapping 2) map matching 3) position tracking and 4) localization quality evaluation. For sensor perception, we use occupancy grid method to represent robot environment. A novel pyramid grid-map based coarse-to-fine matching approach is proposed to improve the localization accuracy. Experimental results including an outdoor environment of 25,000 m2 are presented to validate the feasibility and reliability of the proposed approach
- …