2,212 research outputs found
Dynamic Arrival Rate Estimation for Campus Mobility on Demand Network Graphs
Mobility On Demand (MOD) systems are revolutionizing transportation in urban
settings by improving vehicle utilization and reducing parking congestion. A
key factor in the success of an MOD system is the ability to measure and
respond to real-time customer arrival data. Real time traffic arrival rate data
is traditionally difficult to obtain due to the need to install fixed sensors
throughout the MOD network. This paper presents a framework for measuring
pedestrian traffic arrival rates using sensors onboard the vehicles that make
up the MOD fleet. A novel distributed fusion algorithm is presented which
combines onboard LIDAR and camera sensor measurements to detect trajectories of
pedestrians with a 90% detection hit rate with 1.5 false positives per minute.
A novel moving observer method is introduced to estimate pedestrian arrival
rates from pedestrian trajectories collected from mobile sensors. The moving
observer method is evaluated in both simulation and hardware and is shown to
achieve arrival rate estimates comparable to those that would be obtained with
multiple stationary sensors.Comment: Appears in 2016 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent
Robots and Systems (IROS).
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/7759357
Combining LiDAR Space Clustering and Convolutional Neural Networks for Pedestrian Detection
Pedestrian detection is an important component for safety of autonomous
vehicles, as well as for traffic and street surveillance. There are extensive
benchmarks on this topic and it has been shown to be a challenging problem when
applied on real use-case scenarios. In purely image-based pedestrian detection
approaches, the state-of-the-art results have been achieved with convolutional
neural networks (CNN) and surprisingly few detection frameworks have been built
upon multi-cue approaches. In this work, we develop a new pedestrian detector
for autonomous vehicles that exploits LiDAR data, in addition to visual
information. In the proposed approach, LiDAR data is utilized to generate
region proposals by processing the three dimensional point cloud that it
provides. These candidate regions are then further processed by a
state-of-the-art CNN classifier that we have fine-tuned for pedestrian
detection. We have extensively evaluated the proposed detection process on the
KITTI dataset. The experimental results show that the proposed LiDAR space
clustering approach provides a very efficient way of generating region
proposals leading to higher recall rates and fewer misses for pedestrian
detection. This indicates that LiDAR data can provide auxiliary information for
CNN-based approaches
Dynamic Occupancy Grid Prediction for Urban Autonomous Driving: A Deep Learning Approach with Fully Automatic Labeling
Long-term situation prediction plays a crucial role in the development of
intelligent vehicles. A major challenge still to overcome is the prediction of
complex downtown scenarios with multiple road users, e.g., pedestrians, bikes,
and motor vehicles, interacting with each other. This contribution tackles this
challenge by combining a Bayesian filtering technique for environment
representation, and machine learning as long-term predictor. More specifically,
a dynamic occupancy grid map is utilized as input to a deep convolutional
neural network. This yields the advantage of using spatially distributed
velocity estimates from a single time step for prediction, rather than a raw
data sequence, alleviating common problems dealing with input time series of
multiple sensors. Furthermore, convolutional neural networks have the inherent
characteristic of using context information, enabling the implicit modeling of
road user interaction. Pixel-wise balancing is applied in the loss function
counteracting the extreme imbalance between static and dynamic cells. One of
the major advantages is the unsupervised learning character due to fully
automatic label generation. The presented algorithm is trained and evaluated on
multiple hours of recorded sensor data and compared to Monte-Carlo simulation
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