Title :
Visual SLAM for autonomous ground vehicles
Author :
Lategahn, Henning ; Geiger, Andreas ; Kitt, Bernd
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Meas. & Control, Karlsruhe Inst. of Technol., Karlsruhe, Germany
Abstract :
Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) and Visual SLAM (V-SLAM) in particular have been an active area of research lately. In V-SLAM the main focus is most often laid on the localization part of the problem allowing for a drift free motion estimate. To this end, a sparse set of landmarks is tracked and their position is estimated. However, this set of landmarks (rendering the map) is often too sparse for tasks in autonomous driving such as navigation, path planning, obstacle avoidance etc. Some methods keep the raw measurements for past robot poses to address the sparsity problem often resulting in a pose only SLAM akin to laser scanner SLAM. For the stereo case, this is however impractical due to the high noise of stereo reconstructed point clouds. In this paper we propose a dense stereo V-SLAM algorithm that estimates a dense 3D map representation which is more accurate than raw stereo measurements. Thereto, we run a sparse V SLAM system, take the resulting pose estimates to compute a locally dense representation from dense stereo correspondences. This dense representation is expressed in local coordinate systems which are tracked as part of the SLAM estimate. This allows the dense part to be continuously updated. Our system is driven by visual odometry priors to achieve high robustness when tracking landmarks. Moreover, the sparse part of the SLAM system uses recently published sub mapping techniques to achieve constant runtime complexity most of the time. The improved accuracy over raw stereo measurements is shown in a Monte Carlo simulation. Finally, we demonstrate the feasibility of our method by presenting outdoor experiments of a car like robot.
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; SLAM (robots); collision avoidance; image reconstruction; image representation; mobile robots; motion estimation; navigation; object tracking; pose estimation; road vehicles; robot vision; stereo image processing; Monte Carlo simulation; autonomous driving; autonomous ground vehicles; car like robot; dense 3D map representation; drift free motion estimate; landmark tracking; local coordinate system; navigation; obstacle avoidance; path planning; pose estimate; position estimation; robot pose; runtime complexity; simultaneous localization and mapping; sparsity problem; stereo reconstructed point clouds; submapping technique; visual SLAM; visual odometry; Accuracy; Cameras; Image reconstruction; Kalman filters; Simultaneous localization and mapping; Visualization;
Conference_Titel :
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2011 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Shanghai
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-386-5
DOI :
10.1109/ICRA.2011.5979711