Polygon-based laser scan registration by heterogeneous robots

Author(s):  
Ravi Kaushik ◽  
Jizhong Xiao ◽  
Samleo L. Joseph ◽  
William Morris
2014 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 45-48
Author(s):  
Yuichiro SUEOKA ◽  
Takuto KITA ◽  
Masato ISHIKAWA ◽  
Yasuhiro SUGIMOTO ◽  
Koichi OSUKA

Author(s):  
Meghann Lomas ◽  
Vera Zaychik Moffitt ◽  
Patrick Craven ◽  
Ernest Vincent Cross ◽  
Jerry L. Franke ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret Henderson ◽  
Vadim Pinskiy ◽  
Alexander Tolpygo ◽  
Stephen Savoia ◽  
Pascal Grange ◽  
...  

Stereotactic targeting is a commonly used technique for performing injections in the brains of mice and other animals. The most common method for targeting stereoscopic injections uses the skull indentations bregma and lambda as reference points and is limited in its precision by factors such as skull curvature and individual variation, as well as an incomplete correspondence between skull landmarks and brain locations. In this software tool, a 3D laser scan of the mouse skull is taken in vitro and registered onto a reference skull using a point cloud matching algorithm, and the parameters of the transformation are used to position a glass pipette to place tracer injections. The software was capable of registering sample skulls with less than 100 micron error, and was able to target an injection in a mouse with error of roughly 500 microns. These results indicate that using skull scan registration has the potential to be widely applicable in automating stereotactic targeting of tracer injections.


Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (9) ◽  
pp. 2480
Author(s):  
Igor Rodriguez ◽  
Unai Zabala ◽  
Pedro Marín-Reyes ◽  
Ekaitz Jauregi ◽  
Javier Lorenzo-Navarro ◽  
...  

GidaBot is an application designed to setup and run a heterogeneous team of robots to act as tour guides in multi-floor buildings. Although the tours can go through several floors, the robots can only service a single floor, and thus, a guiding task may require collaboration among several robots. The designed system makes use of a robust inter-robot communication strategy to share goals and paths during the guiding tasks. Such tours work as personal services carried out by one or more robots. In this paper, a face re-identification/verification module based on state-of-the-art techniques is developed, evaluated offline, and integrated into GidaBot’s real daily activities, to avoid new visitors interfering with those attended. It is a complex problem because, as users are casual visitors, no long-term information is stored, and consequently, faces are unknown in the training step. Initially, re-identification and verification are evaluated offline considering different face detectors and computing distances in a face embedding representation. To fulfil the goal online, several face detectors are fused in parallel to avoid face alignment bias produced by face detectors under certain circumstances, and the decision is made based on a minimum distance criterion. This fused approach outperforms any individual method and highly improves the real system’s reliability, as the tests carried out using real robots at the Faculty of Informatics in San Sebastian show.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document