scholarly journals Self-supervised learning for using overhead imagery as maps in outdoor range sensor localization

2021 ◽  
pp. 027836492110457
Author(s):  
Tim Y. Tang ◽  
Daniele De Martini ◽  
Shangzhe Wu ◽  
Paul Newman

Traditional approaches to outdoor vehicle localization assume a reliable, prior map is available, typically built using the same sensor suite as the on-board sensors used during localization. This work makes a different assumption. It assumes that an overhead image of the workspace is available and utilizes that as a map for use for range-based sensor localization by a vehicle. Here, range-based sensors are radars and lidars. Our motivation is simple, off-the-shelf, publicly available overhead imagery such as Google satellite images can be a ubiquitous, cheap, and powerful tool for vehicle localization when a usable prior sensor map is unavailable, inconvenient, or expensive. The challenge to be addressed is that overhead images are clearly not directly comparable to data from ground range sensors because of their starkly different modalities. We present a learned metric localization method that not only handles the modality difference, but is also cheap to train, learning in a self-supervised fashion without requiring metrically accurate ground truth. By evaluating across multiple real-world datasets, we demonstrate the robustness and versatility of our method for various sensor configurations in cross-modality localization, achieving localization errors on-par with a prior supervised approach while requiring no pixel-wise aligned ground truth for supervision at training. We pay particular attention to the use of millimeter-wave radar, which, owing to its complex interaction with the scene and its immunity to weather and lighting conditions, makes for a compelling and valuable use case.

2000 ◽  
Vol 54 (10) ◽  
pp. 101-111
Author(s):  
Aleksey Alekseevich Tolkachev ◽  
Vasiliy Andreevich Makota ◽  
Mariya Petrovna Pavlova ◽  
Anatoliy Moiseevich Nikolaev ◽  
Vladimir Victorovich Denisenko ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 65 (16) ◽  
pp. 1453-1462
Author(s):  
A. N. Nechiporenko ◽  
L. D. Fesenko

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 1157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Fuentes-Pacheco ◽  
Juan Torres-Olivares ◽  
Edgar Roman-Rangel ◽  
Salvador Cervantes ◽  
Porfirio Juarez-Lopez ◽  
...  

Crop segmentation is an important task in Precision Agriculture, where the use of aerial robots with an on-board camera has contributed to the development of new solution alternatives. We address the problem of fig plant segmentation in top-view RGB (Red-Green-Blue) images of a crop grown under open-field difficult circumstances of complex lighting conditions and non-ideal crop maintenance practices defined by local farmers. We present a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) with an encoder-decoder architecture that classifies each pixel as crop or non-crop using only raw colour images as input. Our approach achieves a mean accuracy of 93.85% despite the complexity of the background and a highly variable visual appearance of the leaves. We make available our CNN code to the research community, as well as the aerial image data set and a hand-made ground truth segmentation with pixel precision to facilitate the comparison among different algorithms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
João Lobo ◽  
Rui Henriques ◽  
Sara C. Madeira

Abstract Background Three-way data started to gain popularity due to their increasing capacity to describe inherently multivariate and temporal events, such as biological responses, social interactions along time, urban dynamics, or complex geophysical phenomena. Triclustering, subspace clustering of three-way data, enables the discovery of patterns corresponding to data subspaces (triclusters) with values correlated across the three dimensions (observations $$\times$$ × features $$\times$$ × contexts). With increasing number of algorithms being proposed, effectively comparing them with state-of-the-art algorithms is paramount. These comparisons are usually performed using real data, without a known ground-truth, thus limiting the assessments. In this context, we propose a synthetic data generator, G-Tric, allowing the creation of synthetic datasets with configurable properties and the possibility to plant triclusters. The generator is prepared to create datasets resembling real 3-way data from biomedical and social data domains, with the additional advantage of further providing the ground truth (triclustering solution) as output. Results G-Tric can replicate real-world datasets and create new ones that match researchers needs across several properties, including data type (numeric or symbolic), dimensions, and background distribution. Users can tune the patterns and structure that characterize the planted triclusters (subspaces) and how they interact (overlapping). Data quality can also be controlled, by defining the amount of missing, noise or errors. Furthermore, a benchmark of datasets resembling real data is made available, together with the corresponding triclustering solutions (planted triclusters) and generating parameters. Conclusions Triclustering evaluation using G-Tric provides the possibility to combine both intrinsic and extrinsic metrics to compare solutions that produce more reliable analyses. A set of predefined datasets, mimicking widely used three-way data and exploring crucial properties was generated and made available, highlighting G-Tric’s potential to advance triclustering state-of-the-art by easing the process of evaluating the quality of new triclustering approaches.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
Dominik Meier ◽  
Christian Zech ◽  
Benjamin Baumann ◽  
Bersant Gashi ◽  
Matthias Malzacher ◽  
...  

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