Seite - 20 - in Proceedings of the OAGM&ARW Joint Workshop - Vision, Automation and Robotics
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Fig. 5: Scenario 1 – Comparison of the estimated trajectory with GPS
As shown in Fig. 5, the estimated pose of the first 75m
fits very well with ground truth. The estimated trajectory
of the return slightly deviates from the GPS reference.
The inaccurate estimation of the orientation happens due
to occlusions of the left camera like it is shown in Fig. 4.
However, our robust VO prevents a total failure and still
allows a valid but slightly inaccurate pose estimation via
using images of the right camera instead. The third track of
the logging road is estimated well as a straight line again.
Using the mentioned laptop, the computation time of our
off-line VO of this scenario is about 0.529s per stereo pair.
This timeduration is increaseddue to theocclusionof the left
camera, which acquires the additional processing of the right
image instead of just the left one. This problem especially
happens at the return of the vehicle because the cameras are
mounted on the back of the driver‘s cab.
The second scenario of our dataset is a 3×2169m long
drive of the presented vehicle on a logging road. This
scenario should deliver an answer about the drift behavior of
our implemented VO. Figure 3b represents the first image of
this sequence. The results are shown in Fig. 6. The estimated
trajectory is inconsistent with the ground truth and just the
first 2169m long loop can be identified somehow. Then, the
trajectory continuously deviates from the driven track. If we
look closely at the start of Fig. 6, it shows that distances are
estimated too large in general. The whole trajectory seems
to be scaled compared to the original track.
For a better understanding of the results, it is helpful
to further investigate the 3D-trajectory illustrated in Fig. 7.
Referring to the estimated VO path of this figure, from the
beginning the truck starts to move downwards and also to
twist sideways. This results in a distorted trajectory instead
of a more or less planar movement of the truck.
The explanation of the occurrent problem can be found
with a closer look at the features, which are used for the pose
estimation. Figure 8 shows the detected A-KAZE features
of Fig. 3b, and the sweeping area only contains a few key
points. Most of them are found at the treetops in the upper
half of the image. In the worst-case scenario, for example if
all trees have the same height, all features are just on one line X in m
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Fig. 6: Scenario 2 – Comparison of the estimated trajectory with GPS
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Fig. 7: Scenario 2 – Comparison of the estimated 3D-trajectory with GPS
instead of being well distributed in the image. The outcome
of this is an ill-conditioned pose estimation and hence an
inaccuratelyestimateddistanceandpitch-angle.Theproblem
of this scenario is that image positions hardly change by a
further increase of the distance.
However, as shown in Fig. 9, the yaw angle can be
estimated well because a planar rotation definitely changes
the image positions of these features. The figure clearly
illustrates every turn of the track and the good consensus
of the yaw angle for each loop. Just some minor deviations
due to different drive behavior and drift can be seen. This
means that Fig. 9 shows the potential of our implemented
VO for applications which mainly rely on a good estimation
Fig. 8: Features of two left images used for pose estimation
20
Proceedings of the OAGM&ARW Joint Workshop
Vision, Automation and Robotics
- Titel
- Proceedings of the OAGM&ARW Joint Workshop
- Untertitel
- Vision, Automation and Robotics
- Autoren
- Peter M. Roth
- Markus Vincze
- Wilfried Kubinger
- Andreas Müller
- Bernhard Blaschitz
- Svorad Stolc
- Verlag
- Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz
- Ort
- Wien
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-85125-524-9
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 188
- Schlagwörter
- Tagungsband
- Kategorien
- International
- Tagungsbände