10,230 research outputs found
Positioning and trajectory following tasks in microsystems using model free visual servoing
In this paper, we explore model free visual servoing algorithms by
experimentally evaluating their performances for various tasks
performed on a microassembly workstation developed in our lab. Model
free or so called uncalibrated visual servoing does not need the
system calibration (microscope-camera-micromanipulator) and the
model of the observed scene. It is robust to parameter changes and
disturbances. We tested its performance in point-to-point
positioning and various trajectory following tasks. Experimental
results validate the utility of model free visual servoing in
microassembly tasks
Keyframe-based monocular SLAM: design, survey, and future directions
Extensive research in the field of monocular SLAM for the past fifteen years
has yielded workable systems that found their way into various applications in
robotics and augmented reality. Although filter-based monocular SLAM systems
were common at some time, the more efficient keyframe-based solutions are
becoming the de facto methodology for building a monocular SLAM system. The
objective of this paper is threefold: first, the paper serves as a guideline
for people seeking to design their own monocular SLAM according to specific
environmental constraints. Second, it presents a survey that covers the various
keyframe-based monocular SLAM systems in the literature, detailing the
components of their implementation, and critically assessing the specific
strategies made in each proposed solution. Third, the paper provides insight
into the direction of future research in this field, to address the major
limitations still facing monocular SLAM; namely, in the issues of illumination
changes, initialization, highly dynamic motion, poorly textured scenes,
repetitive textures, map maintenance, and failure recovery
Real-Time analysis and visualization for single-molecule based super-resolution microscopy
Accurate multidimensional localization of isolated fluorescent emitters is a time consuming process in single-molecule based super-resolution microscopy. We demonstrate a functional method for real-time reconstruction with automatic feedback control, without compromising the localization accuracy. Compatible with high frame rates of EM-CCD cameras, it relies on a wavelet segmentation algorithm, together with a mix of CPU/GPU implementation. A combination with Gaussian fitting allows direct access to 3D localization. Automatic feedback control ensures optimal molecule density throughout the acquisition process. With this method, we significantly improve the efficiency and feasibility of localization-based super-resolution microscopy
Planar Object Tracking in the Wild: A Benchmark
Planar object tracking is an actively studied problem in vision-based robotic
applications. While several benchmarks have been constructed for evaluating
state-of-the-art algorithms, there is a lack of video sequences captured in the
wild rather than in constrained laboratory environment. In this paper, we
present a carefully designed planar object tracking benchmark containing 210
videos of 30 planar objects sampled in the natural environment. In particular,
for each object, we shoot seven videos involving various challenging factors,
namely scale change, rotation, perspective distortion, motion blur, occlusion,
out-of-view, and unconstrained. The ground truth is carefully annotated
semi-manually to ensure the quality. Moreover, eleven state-of-the-art
algorithms are evaluated on the benchmark using two evaluation metrics, with
detailed analysis provided for the evaluation results. We expect the proposed
benchmark to benefit future studies on planar object tracking.Comment: Accepted by ICRA 201
Geometric-based Line Segment Tracking for HDR Stereo Sequences
In this work, we propose a purely geometrical approach for the robust matching of line segments for challenging stereo streams with severe illumination changes or High Dynamic Range (HDR) environments. To that purpose, we exploit the univocal nature of the matching problem, i.e. every observation must be corresponded with a single feature or not corresponded at all. We state the problem as a sparse, convex, `1-minimization of the matching vector regularized by the geometric constraints. This formulation allows for the robust tracking of line segments along sequences where traditional appearance-based matching techniques tend to fail due to dynamic changes in illumination conditions. Moreover, the proposed matching algorithm also results in a considerable speed-up of previous state of the art techniques making it suitable for real-time applications such as Visual Odometry (VO). This, of course, comes at expense of a slightly lower number of matches in comparison with appearance based methods, and also limits its application to continuous video sequences, as it is rather constrained to small pose increments between consecutive frames.We validate the claimed advantages by first evaluating the matching performance in challenging video sequences, and then testing the method in a benchmarked point and line based VO algorithm.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional AndalucĂa Tech.This work has been supported by the Spanish Government (project DPI2017-84827-R and grant BES-2015-071606) and by the Andalucian Government (project TEP2012-530)
Semantically Guided Depth Upsampling
We present a novel method for accurate and efficient up- sampling of sparse
depth data, guided by high-resolution imagery. Our approach goes beyond the use
of intensity cues only and additionally exploits object boundary cues through
structured edge detection and semantic scene labeling for guidance. Both cues
are combined within a geodesic distance measure that allows for
boundary-preserving depth in- terpolation while utilizing local context. We
model the observed scene structure by locally planar elements and formulate the
upsampling task as a global energy minimization problem. Our method determines
glob- ally consistent solutions and preserves fine details and sharp depth
bound- aries. In our experiments on several public datasets at different levels
of application, we demonstrate superior performance of our approach over the
state-of-the-art, even for very sparse measurements.Comment: German Conference on Pattern Recognition 2016 (Oral
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