24 research outputs found
Semantic labeling of places
Indoor environments can typically be divided into places with different
functionalities like corridors, kitchens, offices, or seminar rooms. We believe that
such semantic information enables a mobile robot to more efficiently accomplish a
variety of tasks such as human-robot interaction, path-planning, or localization. In
this paper, we propose an approach to classify places in indoor environments into
different categories. Our approach uses AdaBoost to boost simple features extracted from vision and laser range data. Furthermore,we apply a Hidden Markov Model to take spatial dependencies between robot poses into account and to increase the robustness of the classification. Our technique has been implemented and tested on real robots as well as in simulation. Experiments presented in this paper demonstrate that our approach can be utilized to robustly classify places into semantic categories
Semantic labeling of places using information extracted from laser and vision sensor data
Indoor environments can typically be divided into places with different functionalities like corridors, kitchens,
offices, or seminar rooms. The ability to learn such semantic categories from sensor data enables a mobile robot to extend the representation of the environment facilitating the interaction withhumans. As an example, natural language terms like corridor or room can be used to communicate the position of the robot in a map in a more intuitive way. In this work, we firrst propose an approach based on supervised learning to classify the pose of a mobile robot into semantic classes. Our method uses AdaBoost to boost simple features extracted from range data and vision into a strong classifier. We present two main applications of this approach. Firstly, we show how our approach can be utilized by a moving robot for an online classification of the poses traversed along its path using a hidden Markov model. Secondly,
we introduce an approach to learn topological maps from geometric maps by applying our semantic classification procedure in combination with a probabilistic relaxation procedure. We finally show how to apply associative Markov networks (AMNs) together with AdaBoost for classifying complete geometric maps. Experimental results obtained in simulation and with real robots demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach in various indoor
environments
Supervised semantic labeling of places using information extracted from sensor data
Indoor environments can typically be divided into places with different functionalities like corridors, rooms or doorways. The ability to learn such semantic categories from sensor data enables a mobile robot to extend the representation of the environment facilitating interaction with humans. As an example, natural language terms like “corridor” or “room” can be used to communicate the position of the robot in a map in a more intuitive way. In this work, we first propose an approach based on supervised learning to classify the pose of a mobile robot into semantic classes. Our method uses AdaBoost to boost simple features extracted from sensor range data into a strong classifier. We present two main applications of this approach. Firstly, we show how our approach can be utilized by a moving robot for an online classification of the poses traversed along its path using a hidden Markov model. In this case we additionally use as features objects extracted from images. Secondly, we introduce an approach to learn topological maps from geometric maps by applying our semantic classification procedure in combination with a probabilistic relaxation method. Alternatively, we apply associative Markov networks to classify geometric maps and compare the results with a relaxation approach. Experimental results obtained in simulation and with real robots demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach in various indoor environments
The EUropean-VGOS Project
In Spring 2018 the Bonn correlation centre\ua0started a collaboration with the three European stations\ua0of Wettzell, Onsala and Yebes, equipped with\ua0both S/X- and broadband systems, to perform VGOS-like test sessions. The aim is to verify and develop further\ua0the processing chain for VGOS experiments end-to-end, from the scheduling to the analysis of the derived\ua0observables. We will present the current status of\ua0the project
Current Status of the EU-VGOS Project
The EU-VGOS project began in 2018 with\ua0the aim of using the VGOS infrastructure in Europe\ua0to investigate methods for VGOS data processing. The\ua0project is now structured into Working Groups dealing\ua0with operations (stations), e-transfer, correlation and\ua0post-processing, and analysis. This is a report on the\ua0status of the project
RGB2LIDAR: Towards Solving Large-Scale Cross-Modal Visual Localization
We study an important, yet largely unexplored problem of large-scale
cross-modal visual localization by matching ground RGB images to a
geo-referenced aerial LIDAR 3D point cloud (rendered as depth images). Prior
works were demonstrated on small datasets and did not lend themselves to
scaling up for large-scale applications. To enable large-scale evaluation, we
introduce a new dataset containing over 550K pairs (covering 143 km^2 area) of
RGB and aerial LIDAR depth images. We propose a novel joint embedding based
method that effectively combines the appearance and semantic cues from both
modalities to handle drastic cross-modal variations. Experiments on the
proposed dataset show that our model achieves a strong result of a median rank
of 5 in matching across a large test set of 50K location pairs collected from a
14km^2 area. This represents a significant advancement over prior works in
performance and scale. We conclude with qualitative results to highlight the
challenging nature of this task and the benefits of the proposed model. Our
work provides a foundation for further research in cross-modal visual
localization.Comment: ACM Multimedia 202
Adaptive autonomous control using online value iteration with gaussian processes
Abstract—In this paper, we present a novel approach to controlling a robotic system online from scratch based on the reinforcement learning principle. In contrast to other approaches, our method learns the system dynamics and the value function separately, which permits to identify the individual characteristics and is, therefore, easily adaptable to changing conditions. The major problem in the context of learning control policies lies in high-dimensional state and action spaces, that needs to be explored in order to identify the optimal policy. In this paper, we propose an approach that learns the system dynamics and the value function in an alternating fashion based on Gaussian process models. Additionally, to reduce computation time and to make the system applicable to online learning, we present an efficient sparsification method. In experiments carried out with a real miniature blimp we demonstrate that our approach can learn height control online. Further results obtained with an inverted pendulum show that our method requires less data to achieve the same performance as an off-line learning approach. I
Semantic place classification of indoor environments with mobile robots using boosting
Indoor environments can typically be divided into places with different functionalities like kitchens, offices, or seminar rooms. We believe that such semantic information enables a mobile robot to more efficiently accomplish a variety of tasks such as human-robot interaction, path-planning, or localization. This paper presents a supervised learning approach to label different locations using boosting. We train a classifier using features extracted from vision and laser range data. Furthermore, we apply a Hidden Markov Model to increase the robustness of the final classification. Our technique has been implemented and tested on real robots as well as in simulation. The experiments demonstrate that our approach can be utilized to robustly classify places into semantic categories. We also present an example of localization using semantic labeling