2,933 research outputs found

    Robust and Optimal Methods for Geometric Sensor Data Alignment

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    Geometric sensor data alignment - the problem of finding the rigid transformation that correctly aligns two sets of sensor data without prior knowledge of how the data correspond - is a fundamental task in computer vision and robotics. It is inconvenient then that outliers and non-convexity are inherent to the problem and present significant challenges for alignment algorithms. Outliers are highly prevalent in sets of sensor data, particularly when the sets overlap incompletely. Despite this, many alignment objective functions are not robust to outliers, leading to erroneous alignments. In addition, alignment problems are highly non-convex, a property arising from the objective function and the transformation. While finding a local optimum may not be difficult, finding the global optimum is a hard optimisation problem. These key challenges have not been fully and jointly resolved in the existing literature, and so there is a need for robust and optimal solutions to alignment problems. Hence the objective of this thesis is to develop tractable algorithms for geometric sensor data alignment that are robust to outliers and not susceptible to spurious local optima. This thesis makes several significant contributions to the geometric alignment literature, founded on new insights into robust alignment and the geometry of transformations. Firstly, a novel discriminative sensor data representation is proposed that has better viewpoint invariance than generative models and is time and memory efficient without sacrificing model fidelity. Secondly, a novel local optimisation algorithm is developed for nD-nD geometric alignment under a robust distance measure. It manifests a wider region of convergence and a greater robustness to outliers and sampling artefacts than other local optimisation algorithms. Thirdly, the first optimal solution for 3D-3D geometric alignment with an inherently robust objective function is proposed. It outperforms other geometric alignment algorithms on challenging datasets due to its guaranteed optimality and outlier robustness, and has an efficient parallel implementation. Fourthly, the first optimal solution for 2D-3D geometric alignment with an inherently robust objective function is proposed. It outperforms existing approaches on challenging datasets, reliably finding the global optimum, and has an efficient parallel implementation. Finally, another optimal solution is developed for 2D-3D geometric alignment, using a robust surface alignment measure. Ultimately, robust and optimal methods, such as those in this thesis, are necessary to reliably find accurate solutions to geometric sensor data alignment problems

    Methods for Optimal Model Fitting and Sensor Calibration

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    The problem of fitting models to measured data has been studied extensively, not least in the field of computer vision. A central problem in this field is the difficulty in reliably find corresponding structures and points in different images, resulting in outlier data. This thesis presents theoretical results improving the understanding of the connection between model parameter estimation and possible outlier-inlier partitions of data point sets. Using these results a multitude of applications can be analyzed in respects to optimal outlier inlier partitions, optimal norm fitting, and not least in truncated norm sense. Practical polynomial time optimal solvers are derived for several applications, including but not limited to multi-view triangulation and image registration. In this thesis the problem of sensor network self calibration is investigated. Sensor networks play an increasingly important role with the increased availability of mobile, antenna equipped, devices. The application areas can be extended with knowledge of the different sensors relative or absolute positions. We study this problem in the context of bipartite sensor networks. We identify requirements of solvability for several configurations, and present a framework for how such problems can be approached. Further we utilize this framework to derive several solvers, which we show in both synthetic and real examples functions as desired. In both these types of model estimation, as well as in the classical random samples based approaches minimal cases of polynomial systems play a central role. A majority of the problems tackled in this thesis will have solvers based on recent techniques pertaining to action matrix solvers. New application specific polynomial equation sets are constructed and elimination templates designed for them. In addition a general improvement to the method is suggested for a large class of polynomial systems. The method is shown to improve the computational speed by significant reductions in the size of elimination templates as well as in the size of the action matrices. In addition the methodology on average improves the numerical stability of the solvers
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