8,538 research outputs found
An Efficient Index for Visual Search in Appearance-based SLAM
Vector-quantization can be a computationally expensive step in visual
bag-of-words (BoW) search when the vocabulary is large. A BoW-based appearance
SLAM needs to tackle this problem for an efficient real-time operation. We
propose an effective method to speed up the vector-quantization process in
BoW-based visual SLAM. We employ a graph-based nearest neighbor search (GNNS)
algorithm to this aim, and experimentally show that it can outperform the
state-of-the-art. The graph-based search structure used in GNNS can efficiently
be integrated into the BoW model and the SLAM framework. The graph-based index,
which is a k-NN graph, is built over the vocabulary words and can be extracted
from the BoW's vocabulary construction procedure, by adding one iteration to
the k-means clustering, which adds small extra cost. Moreover, exploiting the
fact that images acquired for appearance-based SLAM are sequential, GNNS search
can be initiated judiciously which helps increase the speedup of the
quantization process considerably
Data-Efficient Decentralized Visual SLAM
Decentralized visual simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM) is a
powerful tool for multi-robot applications in environments where absolute
positioning systems are not available. Being visual, it relies on cameras,
cheap, lightweight and versatile sensors, and being decentralized, it does not
rely on communication to a central ground station. In this work, we integrate
state-of-the-art decentralized SLAM components into a new, complete
decentralized visual SLAM system. To allow for data association and
co-optimization, existing decentralized visual SLAM systems regularly exchange
the full map data between all robots, incurring large data transfers at a
complexity that scales quadratically with the robot count. In contrast, our
method performs efficient data association in two stages: in the first stage a
compact full-image descriptor is deterministically sent to only one robot. In
the second stage, which is only executed if the first stage succeeded, the data
required for relative pose estimation is sent, again to only one robot. Thus,
data association scales linearly with the robot count and uses highly compact
place representations. For optimization, a state-of-the-art decentralized
pose-graph optimization method is used. It exchanges a minimum amount of data
which is linear with trajectory overlap. We characterize the resulting system
and identify bottlenecks in its components. The system is evaluated on publicly
available data and we provide open access to the code.Comment: 8 pages, submitted to ICRA 201
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
Numerical Fitting-based Likelihood Calculation to Speed up the Particle Filter
The likelihood calculation of a vast number of particles is the computational
bottleneck for the particle filter in applications where the observation
information is rich. For fast computing the likelihood of particles, a
numerical fitting approach is proposed to construct the Likelihood Probability
Density Function (Li-PDF) by using a comparably small number of so-called
fulcrums. The likelihood of particles is thereby analytically inferred,
explicitly or implicitly, based on the Li-PDF instead of directly computed by
utilizing the observation, which can significantly reduce the computation and
enables real time filtering. The proposed approach guarantees the estimation
quality when an appropriate fitting function and properly distributed fulcrums
are used. The details for construction of the fitting function and fulcrums are
addressed respectively in detail. In particular, to deal with multivariate
fitting, the nonparametric kernel density estimator is presented which is
flexible and convenient for implicit Li-PDF implementation. Simulation
comparison with a variety of existing approaches on a benchmark 1-dimensional
model and multi-dimensional robot localization and visual tracking demonstrate
the validity of our approach.Comment: 42 pages, 17 figures, 4 tables and 1 appendix. This paper is a
draft/preprint of one paper submitted to the IEEE Transaction
- …