873 research outputs found
Direct Monocular Odometry Using Points and Lines
Most visual odometry algorithm for a monocular camera focuses on points,
either by feature matching, or direct alignment of pixel intensity, while
ignoring a common but important geometry entity: edges. In this paper, we
propose an odometry algorithm that combines points and edges to benefit from
the advantages of both direct and feature based methods. It works better in
texture-less environments and is also more robust to lighting changes and fast
motion by increasing the convergence basin. We maintain a depth map for the
keyframe then in the tracking part, the camera pose is recovered by minimizing
both the photometric error and geometric error to the matched edge in a
probabilistic framework. In the mapping part, edge is used to speed up and
increase stereo matching accuracy. On various public datasets, our algorithm
achieves better or comparable performance than state-of-the-art monocular
odometry methods. In some challenging texture-less environments, our algorithm
reduces the state estimation error over 50%.Comment: ICRA 201
LDSO: Direct Sparse Odometry with Loop Closure
In this paper we present an extension of Direct Sparse Odometry (DSO) to a
monocular visual SLAM system with loop closure detection and pose-graph
optimization (LDSO). As a direct technique, DSO can utilize any image pixel
with sufficient intensity gradient, which makes it robust even in featureless
areas. LDSO retains this robustness, while at the same time ensuring
repeatability of some of these points by favoring corner features in the
tracking frontend. This repeatability allows to reliably detect loop closure
candidates with a conventional feature-based bag-of-words (BoW) approach. Loop
closure candidates are verified geometrically and Sim(3) relative pose
constraints are estimated by jointly minimizing 2D and 3D geometric error
terms. These constraints are fused with a co-visibility graph of relative poses
extracted from DSO's sliding window optimization. Our evaluation on publicly
available datasets demonstrates that the modified point selection strategy
retains the tracking accuracy and robustness, and the integrated pose-graph
optimization significantly reduces the accumulated rotation-, translation- and
scale-drift, resulting in an overall performance comparable to state-of-the-art
feature-based systems, even without global bundle adjustment
Real-time Monocular Object SLAM
We present a real-time object-based SLAM system that leverages the largest
object database to date. Our approach comprises two main components: 1) a
monocular SLAM algorithm that exploits object rigidity constraints to improve
the map and find its real scale, and 2) a novel object recognition algorithm
based on bags of binary words, which provides live detections with a database
of 500 3D objects. The two components work together and benefit each other: the
SLAM algorithm accumulates information from the observations of the objects,
anchors object features to especial map landmarks and sets constrains on the
optimization. At the same time, objects partially or fully located within the
map are used as a prior to guide the recognition algorithm, achieving higher
recall. We evaluate our proposal on five real environments showing improvements
on the accuracy of the map and efficiency with respect to other
state-of-the-art techniques
Volume-based Semantic Labeling with Signed Distance Functions
Research works on the two topics of Semantic Segmentation and SLAM
(Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) have been following separate tracks.
Here, we link them quite tightly by delineating a category label fusion
technique that allows for embedding semantic information into the dense map
created by a volume-based SLAM algorithm such as KinectFusion. Accordingly, our
approach is the first to provide a semantically labeled dense reconstruction of
the environment from a stream of RGB-D images. We validate our proposal using a
publicly available semantically annotated RGB-D dataset and a) employing ground
truth labels, b) corrupting such annotations with synthetic noise, c) deploying
a state of the art semantic segmentation algorithm based on Convolutional
Neural Networks.Comment: Submitted to PSIVT201
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