Continuous motion, outdoor, 2 1/2D grid map generation using an inexpensive nodding 2-D laser rangefinder

Author(s):  
G. Broten ◽  
J. Collier
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tingfeng Ye ◽  
Juzhong Zhang ◽  
Yingcai Wan ◽  
Ze Cui ◽  
Hongbo Yang

In this paper, we extend RGB-D SLAM to address the problem that sparse map-building RGB-D SLAM cannot directly generate maps for indoor navigation and propose a SLAM system for fast generation of indoor planar maps. The system uses RGBD images to generate positional information while converting the corresponding RGBD images into 2D planar lasers for 2D grid navigation map reconstruction of indoor scenes under the condition of limited computational resources, solving the problem that the sparse point cloud maps generated by RGB-D SLAM cannot be directly used for navigation. Meanwhile, the pose information provided by RGB-D SLAM and scan matching respectively is fused to obtain a more accurate and robust pose, which improves the accuracy of map building. Furthermore, we demonstrate the function of the proposed system on the ICL indoor dataset and evaluate the performance of different RGB-D SLAM. The method proposed in this paper can be generalized to RGB-D SLAM algorithms, and the accuracy of map building will be further improved with the development of RGB-D SLAM algorithms.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhe Wang ◽  
Jingwei Ge ◽  
Xin Pei ◽  
Yi Zhang

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (10) ◽  
pp. 64-1-64-5
Author(s):  
Mustafa I. Jaber ◽  
Christopher W. Szeto ◽  
Bing Song ◽  
Liudmila Beziaeva ◽  
Stephen C. Benz ◽  
...  

In this paper, we propose a patch-based system to classify non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) diagnostic whole slide images (WSIs) into two major histopathological subtypes: adenocarcinoma (LUAD) and squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC). Classifying patients accurately is important for prognosis and therapy decisions. The proposed system was trained and tested on 876 subtyped NSCLC gigapixel-resolution diagnostic WSIs from 805 patients – 664 in the training set and 141 in the test set. The algorithm has modules for: 1) auto-generated tumor/non-tumor masking using a trained residual neural network (ResNet34), 2) cell-density map generation (based on color deconvolution, local drain segmentation, and watershed transformation), 3) patch-level feature extraction using a pre-trained ResNet34, 4) a tower of linear SVMs for different cell ranges, and 5) a majority voting module for aggregating subtype predictions in unseen testing WSIs. The proposed system was trained and tested on several WSI magnifications ranging from x4 to x40 with a best ROC AUC of 0.95 and an accuracy of 0.86 in test samples. This fully-automated histopathology subtyping method outperforms similar published state-of-the-art methods for diagnostic WSIs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Aysen Degerli ◽  
Mete Ahishali ◽  
Mehmet Yamac ◽  
Serkan Kiranyaz ◽  
Muhammad E. H. Chowdhury ◽  
...  

AbstractComputer-aided diagnosis has become a necessity for accurate and immediate coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) detection to aid treatment and prevent the spread of the virus. Numerous studies have proposed to use Deep Learning techniques for COVID-19 diagnosis. However, they have used very limited chest X-ray (CXR) image repositories for evaluation with a small number, a few hundreds, of COVID-19 samples. Moreover, these methods can neither localize nor grade the severity of COVID-19 infection. For this purpose, recent studies proposed to explore the activation maps of deep networks. However, they remain inaccurate for localizing the actual infestation making them unreliable for clinical use. This study proposes a novel method for the joint localization, severity grading, and detection of COVID-19 from CXR images by generating the so-called infection maps. To accomplish this, we have compiled the largest dataset with 119,316 CXR images including 2951 COVID-19 samples, where the annotation of the ground-truth segmentation masks is performed on CXRs by a novel collaborative human–machine approach. Furthermore, we publicly release the first CXR dataset with the ground-truth segmentation masks of the COVID-19 infected regions. A detailed set of experiments show that state-of-the-art segmentation networks can learn to localize COVID-19 infection with an F1-score of 83.20%, which is significantly superior to the activation maps created by the previous methods. Finally, the proposed approach achieved a COVID-19 detection performance with 94.96% sensitivity and 99.88% specificity.


1988 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 91-93
Author(s):  
D. P. Juyal ◽  
N. K. Barthwal ◽  
A. L. Singh ◽  
S. P. Gupta ◽  
M. T. Rudrappa ◽  
...  

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