2,625 research outputs found
Attention and Anticipation in Fast Visual-Inertial Navigation
We study a Visual-Inertial Navigation (VIN) problem in which a robot needs to
estimate its state using an on-board camera and an inertial sensor, without any
prior knowledge of the external environment. We consider the case in which the
robot can allocate limited resources to VIN, due to tight computational
constraints. Therefore, we answer the following question: under limited
resources, what are the most relevant visual cues to maximize the performance
of visual-inertial navigation? Our approach has four key ingredients. First, it
is task-driven, in that the selection of the visual cues is guided by a metric
quantifying the VIN performance. Second, it exploits the notion of
anticipation, since it uses a simplified model for forward-simulation of robot
dynamics, predicting the utility of a set of visual cues over a future time
horizon. Third, it is efficient and easy to implement, since it leads to a
greedy algorithm for the selection of the most relevant visual cues. Fourth, it
provides formal performance guarantees: we leverage submodularity to prove that
the greedy selection cannot be far from the optimal (combinatorial) selection.
Simulations and real experiments on agile drones show that our approach ensures
state-of-the-art VIN performance while maintaining a lean processing time. In
the easy scenarios, our approach outperforms appearance-based feature selection
in terms of localization errors. In the most challenging scenarios, it enables
accurate visual-inertial navigation while appearance-based feature selection
fails to track robot's motion during aggressive maneuvers.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, 2 table
Dynamics of an electron confined to a "hybrid plane" and interacting with a magnetic field
We discuss spectral and resonance properties of a Hamiltonian describing
motion of an electron moving on a "hybrid surface" consisting on a halfline
attached by its endpoints to a plane under influence of a constant magnetic
field which interacts with its spin through a Rashba-type term.Comment: 16 pages, 2 pdf figures; a changed title and minor improvements, to
appear in Rep. Math. Phy
Computation-Communication Trade-offs and Sensor Selection in Real-time Estimation for Processing Networks
Recent advances in electronics are enabling substantial processing to be
performed at each node (robots, sensors) of a networked system. Local
processing enables data compression and may mitigate measurement noise, but it
is still slower compared to a central computer (it entails a larger
computational delay). However, while nodes can process the data in parallel,
the centralized computational is sequential in nature. On the other hand, if a
node sends raw data to a central computer for processing, it incurs
communication delay. This leads to a fundamental communication-computation
trade-off, where each node has to decide on the optimal amount of preprocessing
in order to maximize the network performance. We consider a network in charge
of estimating the state of a dynamical system and provide three contributions.
First, we provide a rigorous problem formulation for optimal real-time
estimation in processing networks in the presence of delays. Second, we show
that, in the case of a homogeneous network (where all sensors have the same
computation) that monitors a continuous-time scalar linear system, the optimal
amount of local preprocessing maximizing the network estimation performance can
be computed analytically. Third, we consider the realistic case of a
heterogeneous network monitoring a discrete-time multi-variate linear system
and provide algorithms to decide on suitable preprocessing at each node, and to
select a sensor subset when computational constraints make using all sensors
suboptimal. Numerical simulations show that selecting the sensors is crucial.
Moreover, we show that if the nodes apply the preprocessing policy suggested by
our algorithms, they can largely improve the network estimation performance.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures. Accepted journal versio
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