7,068 research outputs found
Learning Ground Traversability from Simulations
Mobile ground robots operating on unstructured terrain must predict which
areas of the environment they are able to pass in order to plan feasible paths.
We address traversability estimation as a heightmap classification problem: we
build a convolutional neural network that, given an image representing the
heightmap of a terrain patch, predicts whether the robot will be able to
traverse such patch from left to right. The classifier is trained for a
specific robot model (wheeled, tracked, legged, snake-like) using simulation
data on procedurally generated training terrains; the trained classifier can be
applied to unseen large heightmaps to yield oriented traversability maps, and
then plan traversable paths. We extensively evaluate the approach in simulation
on six real-world elevation datasets, and run a real-robot validation in one
indoor and one outdoor environment.Comment: Webpage: http://romarcg.xyz/traversability_estimation
Radar-on-Lidar: metric radar localization on prior lidar maps
Radar and lidar, provided by two different range sensors, each has pros and
cons of various perception tasks on mobile robots or autonomous driving. In
this paper, a Monte Carlo system is used to localize the robot with a rotating
radar sensor on 2D lidar maps. We first train a conditional generative
adversarial network to transfer raw radar data to lidar data, and achieve
reliable radar points from generator. Then an efficient radar odometry is
included in the Monte Carlo system. Combining the initial guess from odometry,
a measurement model is proposed to match the radar data and prior lidar maps
for final 2D positioning. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed
localization framework on the public multi-session dataset. The experimental
results show that our system can achieve high accuracy for long-term
localization in outdoor scenes
Mixed marker-based/marker-less visual odometry system for mobile robots
When moving in generic indoor environments, robotic platforms generally rely solely on information provided by onboard sensors to determine their position and orientation. However, the lack of absolute references often leads to the introduction of severe drifts in estimates computed, making autonomous operations really hard to accomplish. This paper proposes a solution to alleviate the impact of the above issues by combining two vision‐based pose estimation techniques working on relative and absolute coordinate systems, respectively. In particular, the unknown ground features in the images that are captured by the vertical camera of a mobile platform are processed by a vision‐based odometry algorithm, which is capable of estimating the relative frame‐to‐frame movements. Then, errors accumulated in the above step are corrected using artificial markers displaced at known positions in the environment. The markers are framed from time to time, which allows the robot to maintain the drifts bounded by additionally providing it with the navigation commands needed for autonomous flight. Accuracy and robustness of the designed technique are demonstrated using an off‐the‐shelf quadrotor via extensive experimental test
Positional estimation techniques for an autonomous mobile robot
Techniques for positional estimation of a mobile robot navigation in an indoor environment are described. A comprehensive review of the various positional estimation techniques studied in the literature is first presented. The techniques are divided into four different types and each of them is discussed briefly. Two different kinds of environments are considered for positional estimation; mountainous natural terrain and an urban, man-made environment with polyhedral buildings. In both cases, the robot is assumed to be equipped with single visual camera that can be panned and tilted and also a 3-D description (world model) of the environment is given. Such a description could be obtained from a stereo pair of aerial images or from the architectural plans of the buildings. Techniques for positional estimation using the camera input and the world model are presented
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