Selective memory: Recalling relevant experience for long-term visual localization

被引:13
|
作者
MacTavish, Kirk [1 ]
Paton, Michael [1 ]
Barfoot, Timothy D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Toronto, Inst Aerosp Studies, Fac Appl Sci & Engn, Toronto, ON, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
mapping; position estimation; terrestrial robotics; NAVIGATION; REPEAT; TEACH;
D O I
10.1002/rob.21838
中图分类号
TP24 [机器人技术];
学科分类号
080202 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Visual navigation is a key enabling technology for autonomous mobile vehicles. The ability to provide large-scale, long-term navigation using low-cost, low-power vision sensors is appealing for industrial applications. A crucial requirement for long-term navigation systems is the ability to localize in environments whose appearance is constantly changing over time-due to lighting, weather, seasons, and physical changes. This paper presents a multiexperience localization (MEL) system that uses a powerful map representation-storing every visual experience in layers-that does not make assumptions about underlying appearance modalities and generators. Our localization system provides real-time performance by selecting online, a subset of experiences against which to localize. We achieve this task through a novel experience-triage algorithm based on collaborative filtering, which selects experiences relevant to the live view, outperforming competing techniques. Based on classical memory-based recommender systems, this technique also enables landmark-level recommendations, is entirely online, and requires no training data. We demonstrate the capabilities of the MEL system in the context of long-term autonomous path following in unstructured outdoor environments with a challenging 100-day field experiment through day, night, snow, spring, and summer. We furthermore provide offline analysis comparing our system to several state-of-the-art alternatives. We show that the combination of the novel methods presented in this paper enable full use of incredibly rich multiexperience maps, opening the door to robust long-term visual localization.
引用
收藏
页码:1265 / 1292
页数:28
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Long-Term Visual Localization Revisited
    Toft, Carl
    Maddern, Will
    Torii, Akihiko
    Hammarstrand, Lars
    Stenborg, Erik
    Safari, Daniel
    Okutomi, Masatoshi
    Pollefeys, Marc
    Sivic, Josef
    Pajdla, Tomas
    Kahl, Fredrik
    Sattler, Torsten
    [J]. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PATTERN ANALYSIS AND MACHINE INTELLIGENCE, 2022, 44 (04) : 2074 - 2088
  • [2] Visual memory, the long and the short of it: A review of visual working memory and long-term memory
    Schurgin, Mark W.
    [J]. ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2018, 80 (05) : 1035 - 1056
  • [3] Visual memory, the long and the short of it: A review of visual working memory and long-term memory
    Mark W. Schurgin
    [J]. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2018, 80 : 1035 - 1056
  • [4] Creation of visual long-term memory
    Danko Nikolić
    Wolf Singer
    [J]. Perception & Psychophysics, 2007, 69 : 904 - 912
  • [5] Creation of visual long-term memory
    Nikolic, Danko
    Singer, Wolf
    [J]. PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2007, 69 (06): : 904 - 912
  • [6] Long-term Visual Localization with Mobile Sensors
    Yan, Shen
    Liu, Yu
    Wang, Long
    Shen, Zehong
    Peng, Zhen
    Liu, Haomin
    Zhang, Maojun
    Zhang, Guofeng
    Zhou, Xiaowei
    [J]. 2023 IEEE/CVF CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER VISION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION (CVPR), 2023, : 17245 - 17255
  • [7] Visual long-term memory for spatial frequency?
    Martin Lages
    Aileen Paul
    [J]. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 2006, 13 : 486 - 492
  • [8] Visual long-term memory for spatial frequency?
    Lages, Martin
    Paul, Aileen
    [J]. PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2006, 13 (03) : 486 - 492
  • [9] SELECTIVE SEARCH IN LONG-TERM RECOGNITION MEMORY
    WILDER, L
    EPSTEIN, W
    [J]. BULLETIN OF THE PSYCHONOMIC SOCIETY, 1974, 4 (NA4) : 256 - 256
  • [10] Visual Working Memory is More Tolerant Than Visual Long-Term Memory
    Schurgin, Mark W.
    Flombaum, Jonathan I.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 2018, 44 (08) : 1216 - 1227