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Author |
M. Altillawi; S. Li; S.M. Prakhya; Z. Liu; Joan Serrat |
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Title |
Implicit Learning of Scene Geometry From Poses for Global Localization |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2024 |
Publication |
IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters |
Abbreviated Journal |
ROBOTAUTOMLET |
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Volume |
9 |
Issue |
2 |
Pages |
955-962 |
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Keywords |
Localization; Localization and mapping; Deep learning for visual perception; Visual learning |
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Abstract |
Global visual localization estimates the absolute pose of a camera using a single image, in a previously mapped area. Obtaining the pose from a single image enables many robotics and augmented/virtual reality applications. Inspired by latest advances in deep learning, many existing approaches directly learn and regress 6 DoF pose from an input image. However, these methods do not fully utilize the underlying scene geometry for pose regression. The challenge in monocular relocalization is the minimal availability of supervised training data, which is just the corresponding 6 DoF poses of the images. In this letter, we propose to utilize these minimal available labels (i.e., poses) to learn the underlying 3D geometry of the scene and use the geometry to estimate the 6 DoF camera pose. We present a learning method that uses these pose labels and rigid alignment to learn two 3D geometric representations ( X, Y, Z coordinates ) of the scene, one in camera coordinate frame and the other in global coordinate frame. Given a single image, it estimates these two 3D scene representations, which are then aligned to estimate a pose that matches the pose label. This formulation allows for the active inclusion of additional learning constraints to minimize 3D alignment errors between the two 3D scene representations, and 2D re-projection errors between the 3D global scene representation and 2D image pixels, resulting in improved localization accuracy. During inference, our model estimates the 3D scene geometry in camera and global frames and aligns them rigidly to obtain pose in real-time. We evaluate our work on three common visual localization datasets, conduct ablation studies, and show that our method exceeds state-of-the-art regression methods' pose accuracy on all datasets. |
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2377-3766 |
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ADAS |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ |
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3857 |
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Author |
Jose Manuel Alvarez; Antonio Lopez; Theo Gevers; Felipe Lumbreras |
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Title |
Combining Priors, Appearance and Context for Road Detection |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2014 |
Publication |
IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems |
Abbreviated Journal |
TITS |
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15 |
Issue |
3 |
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1168-1178 |
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Illuminant invariance; lane markings; road detection; road prior; road scene understanding; vanishing point; 3-D scene layout |
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Abstract |
Detecting the free road surface ahead of a moving vehicle is an important research topic in different areas of computer vision, such as autonomous driving or car collision warning.
Current vision-based road detection methods are usually based solely on low-level features. Furthermore, they generally assume structured roads, road homogeneity, and uniform lighting conditions, constraining their applicability in real-world scenarios. In this paper, road priors and contextual information are introduced for road detection. First, we propose an algorithm to estimate road priors online using geographical information, providing relevant initial information about the road location. Then, contextual cues, including horizon lines, vanishing points, lane markings, 3-D scene layout, and road geometry, are used in addition to low-level cues derived from the appearance of roads. Finally, a generative model is used to combine these cues and priors, leading to a road detection method that is, to a large degree, robust to varying imaging conditions, road types, and scenarios. |
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IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC |
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1524-9050 |
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ADAS; 600.076;ISE |
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Admin @ si @ ALG2014 |
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2501 |
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