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Global Appearance Applied to Visual Map Building and Path Estimation Using Multiscale Analysis
Author(s) -
Francisco Amorós,
Luis Payá,
Óscar Reinoso,
Walterio MayolCuevas,
Andrew Calway
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
mathematical problems in engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.262
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1026-7077
pISSN - 1024-123X
DOI - 10.1155/2014/365417
Subject(s) - adjacency list , computer science , node (physics) , topological map , position (finance) , path (computing) , graph , artificial intelligence , field (mathematics) , robot , topology (electrical circuits) , computer vision , mobile robot , algorithm , theoretical computer science , mathematics , programming language , structural engineering , finance , combinatorics , pure mathematics , engineering , economics
In this work we present a topological map building and localization system for mobile robots based on global appearance of visual information. We include a comparison and analysis of global-appearance techniques applied to wide-angle scenes in retrieval tasks. Next, we define multiscale analysis, which permits improving the association between images and extracting topological distances. Then, a topological map-building algorithm is proposed. At first, the algorithm has information only of some isolated positions of the navigation area in the form of nodes. Each node is composed of a collection of images that covers the complete field of view from a certain position. The algorithm solves the node retrieval and estimates their spatial arrangement. With these aims, it uses the visual information captured along some routes that cover the navigation area. As a result, the algorithm builds a graph that reflects the distribution and adjacency relations between nodes (map). After the map building, we also propose a route path estimation system. This algorithm takes advantage of the multiscale analysis. The accuracy in the pose estimation is not reduced to the nodes locations but also to intermediate positions between them. The algorithms have been tested using two different databases captured in real indoor environments under dynamic conditions.

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