12,414 research outputs found

    Three-dimensional Laser-based Classification in Outdoor Environments

    Get PDF
    Robotics research strives for deploying autonomous systems in populated environments, such as inner city traffic. Autonomous cars need a reliable collision avoidance, but also an object recognition to distinguish different classes of traffic participants. For both tasks, fast three-dimensional laser range sensors generating multiple accurate laser range scans per second, each consisting of a vast number of laser points, are often employed. In this thesis, we investigate and develop classification algorithms that allow us to automatically assign semantic labels to laser scans. We mainly face two challenges: (1) we have to ensure consistent and correct classification results and (2) we must efficiently process a vast number of laser points per scan. In consideration of these challenges, we cover both stages of classification -- the feature extraction from laser range scans and the classification model that maps from the features to semantic labels. As for the feature extraction, we contribute by thoroughly evaluating important state-of-the-art histogram descriptors. We investigate critical parameters of the descriptors and experimentally show for the first time that the classification performance can be significantly improved using a large support radius and a global reference frame. As for learning the classification model, we contribute with new algorithms that improve the classification efficiency and accuracy. Our first approach aims at deriving a consistent point-wise interpretation of the whole laser range scan. By combining efficient similarity-preserving hashing and multiple linear classifiers, we considerably improve the consistency of label assignments, requiring only minimal computational overhead compared to a single linear classifier. In the last part of the thesis, we aim at classifying objects represented by segments. We propose a novel hierarchical segmentation approach comprising multiple stages and a novel mixture classification model of multiple bag-of-words vocabularies. We demonstrate superior performance of both approaches compared to their single component counterparts using challenging real world datasets.Ziel des Forschungsbereichs Robotik ist der Einsatz autonomer Systeme in natürlichen Umgebungen, wie zum Beispiel innerstädtischem Verkehr. Autonome Fahrzeuge benötigen einerseits eine zuverlässige Kollisionsvermeidung und andererseits auch eine Objekterkennung zur Unterscheidung verschiedener Klassen von Verkehrsteilnehmern. Verwendung finden vorallem drei-dimensionale Laserentfernungssensoren, die mehrere präzise Laserentfernungsscans pro Sekunde erzeugen und jeder Scan besteht hierbei aus einer hohen Anzahl an Laserpunkten. In dieser Dissertation widmen wir uns der Untersuchung und Entwicklung neuartiger Klassifikationsverfahren zur automatischen Zuweisung von semantischen Objektklassen zu Laserpunkten. Hierbei begegnen wir hauptsächlich zwei Herausforderungen: (1) wir möchten konsistente und korrekte Klassifikationsergebnisse erreichen und (2) die immense Menge an Laserdaten effizient verarbeiten. Unter Berücksichtigung dieser Herausforderungen untersuchen wir beide Verarbeitungsschritte eines Klassifikationsverfahrens -- die Merkmalsextraktion unter Nutzung von Laserdaten und das eigentliche Klassifikationsmodell, welches die Merkmale auf semantische Objektklassen abbildet. Bezüglich der Merkmalsextraktion leisten wir ein Beitrag durch eine ausführliche Evaluation wichtiger Histogrammdeskriptoren. Wir untersuchen kritische Deskriptorparameter und zeigen zum ersten Mal, dass die Klassifikationsgüte unter Nutzung von großen Merkmalsradien und eines globalen Referenzrahmens signifikant gesteigert wird. Bezüglich des Lernens des Klassifikationsmodells, leisten wir Beiträge durch neue Algorithmen, welche die Effizienz und Genauigkeit der Klassifikation verbessern. In unserem ersten Ansatz möchten wir eine konsistente punktweise Interpretation des gesamten Laserscans erreichen. Zu diesem Zweck kombinieren wir eine ähnlichkeitserhaltende Hashfunktion und mehrere lineare Klassifikatoren und erreichen hierdurch eine erhebliche Verbesserung der Konsistenz der Klassenzuweisung bei minimalen zusätzlichen Aufwand im Vergleich zu einem einzelnen linearen Klassifikator. Im letzten Teil der Dissertation möchten wir Objekte, die als Segmente repräsentiert sind, klassifizieren. Wir stellen eine neuartiges hierarchisches Segmentierungsverfahren und ein neuartiges Klassifikationsmodell auf Basis einer Mixtur mehrerer bag-of-words Vokabulare vor. Wir demonstrieren unter Nutzung von praxisrelevanten Datensätzen, dass beide Ansätze im Vergleich zu ihren Entsprechungen aus einer einzelnen Komponente zu erheblichen Verbesserungen führen

    Ground Extraction from 3D Lidar Point Clouds

    Get PDF
    © 2018 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works Pomares, A., Martínez, J.L., Mandow, A., Martínez, M.A., Morán, M., Morales, J. Ground extraction from 3D lidar point clouds with the Classification Learner App (2018) 26th Mediterranean Conference on Control and Automation, Zadar, Croatia, June 2018, pp.400-405. DOI: PendingGround extraction from three-dimensional (3D) range data is a relevant problem for outdoor navigation of unmanned ground vehicles. Even if this problem has received attention with specific heuristics and segmentation approaches, identification of ground and non-ground points can benefit from state-of-the-art classification methods, such as those included in the Matlab Classification Learner App. This paper proposes a comparative study of the machine learning methods included in this tool in terms of training times as well as in their predictive performance. With this purpose, we have combined three suitable features for ground detection, which has been applied to an urban dataset with several labeled 3D point clouds. Most of the analyzed techniques achieve good classification results, but only a few offer low training and prediction times.This work was partially supported by the Spanish project DPI 2015- 65186-R. The publication has received support from Universidad de Málaga, Campus de Excelencia Andalucía Tech

    Point cloud segmentation using hierarchical tree for architectural models

    Full text link
    Recent developments in the 3D scanning technologies have made the generation of highly accurate 3D point clouds relatively easy but the segmentation of these point clouds remains a challenging area. A number of techniques have set precedent of either planar or primitive based segmentation in literature. In this work, we present a novel and an effective primitive based point cloud segmentation algorithm. The primary focus, i.e. the main technical contribution of our method is a hierarchical tree which iteratively divides the point cloud into segments. This tree uses an exclusive energy function and a 3D convolutional neural network, HollowNets to classify the segments. We test the efficacy of our proposed approach using both real and synthetic data obtaining an accuracy greater than 90% for domes and minarets.Comment: 9 pages. 10 figures. Submitted in EuroGraphics 201

    Towards Odor-Sensitive Mobile Robots

    Get PDF
    J. Monroy, J. Gonzalez-Jimenez, "Towards Odor-Sensitive Mobile Robots", Electronic Nose Technologies and Advances in Machine Olfaction, IGI Global, pp. 244--263, 2018, doi:10.4018/978-1-5225-3862-2.ch012 VersiĂłn preprint, con permiso del editorOut of all the components of a mobile robot, its sensorial system is undoubtedly among the most critical ones when operating in real environments. Until now, these sensorial systems mostly relied on range sensors (laser scanner, sonar, active triangulation) and cameras. While electronic noses have barely been employed, they can provide a complementary sensory information, vital for some applications, as with humans. This chapter analyzes the motivation of providing a robot with gas-sensing capabilities and also reviews some of the hurdles that are preventing smell from achieving the importance of other sensing modalities in robotics. The achievements made so far are reviewed to illustrate the current status on the three main fields within robotics olfaction: the classification of volatile substances, the spatial estimation of the gas dispersion from sparse measurements, and the localization of the gas source within a known environment

    Place Categorization and Semantic Mapping on a Mobile Robot

    Full text link
    In this paper we focus on the challenging problem of place categorization and semantic mapping on a robot without environment-specific training. Motivated by their ongoing success in various visual recognition tasks, we build our system upon a state-of-the-art convolutional network. We overcome its closed-set limitations by complementing the network with a series of one-vs-all classifiers that can learn to recognize new semantic classes online. Prior domain knowledge is incorporated by embedding the classification system into a Bayesian filter framework that also ensures temporal coherence. We evaluate the classification accuracy of the system on a robot that maps a variety of places on our campus in real-time. We show how semantic information can boost robotic object detection performance and how the semantic map can be used to modulate the robot's behaviour during navigation tasks. The system is made available to the community as a ROS module

    SEGCloud: Semantic Segmentation of 3D Point Clouds

    Full text link
    3D semantic scene labeling is fundamental to agents operating in the real world. In particular, labeling raw 3D point sets from sensors provides fine-grained semantics. Recent works leverage the capabilities of Neural Networks (NNs), but are limited to coarse voxel predictions and do not explicitly enforce global consistency. We present SEGCloud, an end-to-end framework to obtain 3D point-level segmentation that combines the advantages of NNs, trilinear interpolation(TI) and fully connected Conditional Random Fields (FC-CRF). Coarse voxel predictions from a 3D Fully Convolutional NN are transferred back to the raw 3D points via trilinear interpolation. Then the FC-CRF enforces global consistency and provides fine-grained semantics on the points. We implement the latter as a differentiable Recurrent NN to allow joint optimization. We evaluate the framework on two indoor and two outdoor 3D datasets (NYU V2, S3DIS, KITTI, Semantic3D.net), and show performance comparable or superior to the state-of-the-art on all datasets.Comment: Accepted as a spotlight at the International Conference of 3D Vision (3DV 2017

    Ground Profile Recovery from Aerial 3D LiDAR-based Maps

    Get PDF
    The paper presents the study and implementation of the ground detection methodology with filtration and removal of forest points from LiDAR-based 3D point cloud using the Cloth Simulation Filtering (CSF) algorithm. The methodology allows to recover a terrestrial relief and create a landscape map of a forestry region. As the proof-of-concept, we provided the outdoor flight experiment, launching a hexacopter under a mixed forestry region with sharp ground changes nearby Innopolis city (Russia), which demonstrated the encouraging results for both ground detection and methodology robustness.Comment: 8 pages, FRUCT-2019 conferenc
    • …
    corecore