Title :
Computer vision based general object following for GPS-denied multirotor unmanned vehicles
Author :
Pestana, Jesus ; Sanchez-Lopez, Jose Luis ; Saripalli, Srikanth ; Campoy, Pascual
Author_Institution :
Comput. Vision Group, UPM, Madrid, Spain
Abstract :
The motivation of this research is to show that visual based object tracking and following is reliable using a cheap GPS-denied multirotor platform such as the AR Drone 2.0. Our architecture allows the user to specify an object in the image that the robot has to follow from an approximate constant distance. At the current stage of our development, in the event of image tracking loss the system starts to hover and waits for the image tracking recovery or second detection, which requires the usage of odometry measurements for self stabilization. During the following task, our software utilizes the forward-facing camera images and part of the IMU data to calculate the references for the four on-board low-level control loops. To obtain a stronger wind disturbance rejection and an improved navigation performance, a yaw heading reference based on the IMU data is internally kept and updated by our control algorithm. We validate the architecture using an AR Drone 2.0 and the OpenTLD tracker in outdoor suburban areas. The experimental tests have shown robustness against wind perturbations, target occlusion and illumination changes, and the system´s capability to track a great variety of objects present on suburban areas, for instance: walking or running people, windows, AC machines, static and moving cars and plants.
Keywords :
Global Positioning System; augmented reality; autonomous aerial vehicles; cameras; distance measurement; gait analysis; hovercraft; inertial navigation; measurement systems; mobile robots; object tracking; robot vision; visual servoing; wind; AR Drone 2.0; GPS; IMU; OpenTLD tracker; approximate constant distance; computer vision based general object following; forward facing camera image; hover; illumination change; image tracking loss; image tracking recovery; multirotor unmanned vehicle; navigation performance; odometry measurement; on-board low level control loop; outdoor suburban area; robot; self stabilization; suburban area; target occlusion; visual based object tracking; walking people; wind disturbance rejection; wind perturbation; yaw heading reference; Cameras; Navigation; Target tracking; Vehicles; Visual servoing; Visualization; Object Following; Quadrotor Control; UAV vision based control; Visual Servoing;
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference (ACC), 2014
Conference_Location :
Portland, OR
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-3272-6
DOI :
10.1109/ACC.2014.6858831