9,059 research outputs found
An Effective Multi-Cue Positioning System for Agricultural Robotics
The self-localization capability is a crucial component for Unmanned Ground
Vehicles (UGV) in farming applications. Approaches based solely on visual cues
or on low-cost GPS are easily prone to fail in such scenarios. In this paper,
we present a robust and accurate 3D global pose estimation framework, designed
to take full advantage of heterogeneous sensory data. By modeling the pose
estimation problem as a pose graph optimization, our approach simultaneously
mitigates the cumulative drift introduced by motion estimation systems (wheel
odometry, visual odometry, ...), and the noise introduced by raw GPS readings.
Along with a suitable motion model, our system also integrates two additional
types of constraints: (i) a Digital Elevation Model and (ii) a Markov Random
Field assumption. We demonstrate how using these additional cues substantially
reduces the error along the altitude axis and, moreover, how this benefit
spreads to the other components of the state. We report exhaustive experiments
combining several sensor setups, showing accuracy improvements ranging from 37%
to 76% with respect to the exclusive use of a GPS sensor. We show that our
approach provides accurate results even if the GPS unexpectedly changes
positioning mode. The code of our system along with the acquired datasets are
released with this paper.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters,
201
Fast, Accurate Thin-Structure Obstacle Detection for Autonomous Mobile Robots
Safety is paramount for mobile robotic platforms such as self-driving cars
and unmanned aerial vehicles. This work is devoted to a task that is
indispensable for safety yet was largely overlooked in the past -- detecting
obstacles that are of very thin structures, such as wires, cables and tree
branches. This is a challenging problem, as thin objects can be problematic for
active sensors such as lidar and sonar and even for stereo cameras. In this
work, we propose to use video sequences for thin obstacle detection. We
represent obstacles with edges in the video frames, and reconstruct them in 3D
using efficient edge-based visual odometry techniques. We provide both a
monocular camera solution and a stereo camera solution. The former incorporates
Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) data to solve scale ambiguity, while the latter
enjoys a novel, purely vision-based solution. Experiments demonstrated that the
proposed methods are fast and able to detect thin obstacles robustly and
accurately under various conditions.Comment: Appeared at IEEE CVPR 2017 Workshop on Embedded Visio
Map-Guided Curriculum Domain Adaptation and Uncertainty-Aware Evaluation for Semantic Nighttime Image Segmentation
We address the problem of semantic nighttime image segmentation and improve
the state-of-the-art, by adapting daytime models to nighttime without using
nighttime annotations. Moreover, we design a new evaluation framework to
address the substantial uncertainty of semantics in nighttime images. Our
central contributions are: 1) a curriculum framework to gradually adapt
semantic segmentation models from day to night through progressively darker
times of day, exploiting cross-time-of-day correspondences between daytime
images from a reference map and dark images to guide the label inference in the
dark domains; 2) a novel uncertainty-aware annotation and evaluation framework
and metric for semantic segmentation, including image regions beyond human
recognition capability in the evaluation in a principled fashion; 3) the Dark
Zurich dataset, comprising 2416 unlabeled nighttime and 2920 unlabeled twilight
images with correspondences to their daytime counterparts plus a set of 201
nighttime images with fine pixel-level annotations created with our protocol,
which serves as a first benchmark for our novel evaluation. Experiments show
that our map-guided curriculum adaptation significantly outperforms
state-of-the-art methods on nighttime sets both for standard metrics and our
uncertainty-aware metric. Furthermore, our uncertainty-aware evaluation reveals
that selective invalidation of predictions can improve results on data with
ambiguous content such as our benchmark and profit safety-oriented applications
involving invalid inputs.Comment: IEEE T-PAMI 202
An Overview about Emerging Technologies of Autonomous Driving
Since DARPA started Grand Challenges in 2004 and Urban Challenges in 2007,
autonomous driving has been the most active field of AI applications. This
paper gives an overview about technical aspects of autonomous driving
technologies and open problems. We investigate the major fields of self-driving
systems, such as perception, mapping and localization, prediction, planning and
control, simulation, V2X and safety etc. Especially we elaborate on all these
issues in a framework of data closed loop, a popular platform to solve the long
tailed autonomous driving problems
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