• DocumentCode
    1054263
  • Title

    Distributed surveillance and reconnaissance using multiple autonomous ATVs: CyberScout

  • Author

    Saptharishi, Mahesh ; Oliver, C. Spence ; Diehl, Christopher P. ; Bhat, Kiran S. ; Dolan, John M. ; Trebi-Ollennu, Ashitey ; Khosla, Pradeep K.

  • Author_Institution
    Inst. for Complex Engineered Syst., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
  • Volume
    18
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    2002
  • fDate
    10/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    826
  • Lastpage
    836
  • Abstract
    The objective of the CyberScout project is to develop an autonomous surveillance and reconnaissance system using a network of all-terrain vehicles. We focus on two facets of this system: 1) vision for surveillance and 2) autonomous navigation and dynamic path planning. In the area of vision-based surveillance, we have developed robust, efficient algorithms to detect, classify, and track moving objects of interest (person, people, or vehicle) with a static camera. Adaptation through feedback from the classifier and tracker allow the detector to use grayscale imagery, but perform as well as prior color-based detectors. We have extended the detector using scene mosaicing to detect and index moving objects when the camera is panning or tilting. The classification algorithm performs well with coarse inputs, has unparalleled rejection capabilities, and can flag novel moving objects. The tracking algorithm achieves highly accurate (96%) frame-to-frame correspondence for multiple moving objects in cluttered scenes by determining the discriminant relevance of object features. We have also developed a novel mission coordination architecture, CPAD (Checkpoint/Priority/Action Database), which performs path planning via checkpoint and dynamic priority assignment, using statistical estimates of the environment´s motion structure. The motion structure is used to make both preplanning and reactive behaviors more efficient by applying global context. This approach is more computationally efficient than centralized approaches and exploits robot cooperation in dynamic environments better than decoupled approaches.
  • Keywords
    image classification; image segmentation; image sequences; mobile robots; path planning; robot vision; surveillance; CyberScout; all-terrain vehicles; autonomous navigation; checkpoint/priority/action database; classification algorithm; cluttered scenes; coarse inputs; color-based detectors; discriminant relevance; distributed reconnaissance; distributed surveillance; dynamic environments; dynamic path planning; image mosaics; motion structure; moving objects; multiple autonomous ATVs; object classification; panning; preplanning behaviors; reactive behaviors; rejection capabilities; scene mosaicing; static camera; tilting; tracking algorithm; vision-based surveillance; Cameras; Detectors; HDTV; Layout; Object detection; Path planning; Reconnaissance; Remotely operated vehicles; Surveillance; Vehicle dynamics;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Robotics and Automation, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1042-296X
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TRA.2002.804501
  • Filename
    1068001