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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
71

Stereo vision and LIDAR based Dynamic Occupancy Grid mapping : Application to scenes analysis for Intelligent Vehicles / Cartographie dynamique occupation grille basée sur la vision stéréo et LIDAR : Application à l'analyse de scènes pour les véhicules intelligents

Li, You 03 December 2013 (has links)
Les systèmes de perception, qui sont à la base du concept du véhicule intelligent, doivent répondre à des critères de performance à plusieurs niveaux afin d’assurer des fonctions d’aide à la conduite et/ou de conduite autonome. Aujourd’hui, la majorité des systèmes de perception pour véhicules intelligents sont basés sur la combinaison de données issues de plusieurs capteurs (caméras, lidars, radars, etc.). Les travaux de cette thèse concernent le développement d’un système de perception à base d’un capteur de vision stéréoscopique et d’un capteur lidar pour l’analyse de scènes dynamiques en environnement urbain. Les travaux présentés sont divisés en quatre parties.La première partie présente une méthode d’odométrie visuelle basée sur la stéréovision, avec une comparaison de différents détecteurs de primitives et différentes méthodes d’association de ces primitives. Un couple de détecteur et de méthode d’association de primitives a été sélectionné sur la base d’évaluation de performances à base de plusieurs critères. Dans la deuxième partie, les objets en mouvement sont détectés et segmentés en utilisant les résultats d’odométrie visuelle et l’image U-disparité. Ensuite, des primitives spatiales sont extraites avec une méthode basée sur la technique KPCA et des classifieurs sont enfin entrainés pour reconnaitre les objets en mouvement (piétons, cyclistes, véhicules). La troisième partie est consacrée au calibrage extrinsèque d’un capteur stéréoscopique et d’un Lidar. La méthode de calibrage proposée, qui utilise une mire plane, est basée sur l’exploitation d’une relation géométrique entre les caméras du capteur stéréoscopique. Pour une meilleure robustesse, cette méthode intègre un modèle de bruit capteur et un processus d’optimisation basé sur la distance de Mahalanobis. La dernière partie de cette thèse présente une méthode de construction d’une grille d’occupation dynamique en utilisant la reconstruction 3D de l’environnement, obtenue des données de stéréovision et Lidar de manière séparée puis conjointement. Pour une meilleure précision, l’angle entre le plan de la chaussée et le capteur stéréoscopique est estimé. Les résultats de détection et de reconnaissance (issus des première et deuxième parties) sont incorporés dans la grille d’occupation pour lui associer des connaissances sémantiques. Toutes les méthodes présentées dans cette thèse sont testées et évaluées avec la simulation et avec de données réelles acquises avec la plateforme expérimentale véhicule intelligent SetCar” du laboratoire IRTES-SET. / Intelligent vehicles require perception systems with high performances. Usually, perception system consists of multiple sensors, such as cameras, 2D/3D lidars or radars. The works presented in this Ph.D thesis concern several topics on cameras and lidar based perception for understanding dynamic scenes in urban environments. The works are composed of four parts.In the first part, a stereo vision based visual odometry is proposed by comparing several different approaches of image feature detection and feature points association. After a comprehensive comparison, a suitable feature detector and a feature points association approach is selected to achieve better performance of stereo visual odometry. In the second part, independent moving objects are detected and segmented by the results of visual odometry and U-disparity image. Then, spatial features are extracted by a kernel-PCA method and classifiers are trained based on these spatial features to recognize different types of common moving objects e.g. pedestrians, vehicles and cyclists. In the third part, an extrinsic calibration method between a 2D lidar and a stereoscopic system is proposed. This method solves the problem of extrinsic calibration by placing a common calibration chessboard in front of the stereoscopic system and 2D lidar, and by considering the geometric relationship between the cameras of the stereoscopic system. This calibration method integrates also sensor noise models and Mahalanobis distance optimization for more robustness. At last, dynamic occupancy grid mapping is proposed by 3D reconstruction of the environment, obtained from stereovision and Lidar data separately and then conjointly. An improved occupancy grid map is obtained by estimating the pitch angle between ground plane and the stereoscopic system. The moving object detection and recognition results (from the first and second parts) are incorporated into the occupancy grid map to augment the semantic meanings. All the proposed and developed methods are tested and evaluated with simulation and real data acquired by the experimental platform “intelligent vehicle SetCar” of IRTES-SET laboratory.
72

Analýza vlastností stereokamery ZED ve venkovním prostředí / Analysis of ZED stereocamera in outdoor environment

Svoboda, Ondřej January 2019 (has links)
The Master thesis is focused on analyzing stereo camera ZED in the outdoor environment. There is compared ZEDfu visual odometry with commonly used methods like GPS or wheel odometry. Moreover, the thesis includes analyses of SLAM in the changeable outdoor environment, too. The simultaneous mapping and localization in RTAB-Map were processed separately with SIFT and BRISK descriptors. The aim of this master thesis is to analyze the behaviour ZED camera in the outdoor environment for future implementation in mobile robotics.
73

Cooperative Navigation of Fixed-Wing Micro Air Vehicles in GPS-Denied Environments

Ellingson, Gary James 05 November 2019 (has links)
Micro air vehicles have recently gained popularity due to their potential as autonomous systems. Their future impact, however, will depend in part on how well they can navigate in GPS-denied and GPS-degraded environments. In response to this need, this dissertation investigates a potential solution for GPS-denied operations called relative navigation. The method utilizes keyframe-to-keyframe odometry estimates and their covariances in a global back end that represents the global state as a pose graph. The back end is able to effectively represent nonlinear uncertainties and incorporate opportunistic global constraints. The GPS-denied research community has, for the most part, neglected to consider fixed-wing aircraft. This dissertation enables fixed-wing aircraft to utilize relative navigation by accounting for their sensing requirements. The development of an odometry-like, front-end, EKF-based estimator that utilizes only a monocular camera and an inertial measurement unit is presented. The filter uses the measurement model of the multi-state-constraint Kalman filter and regularly performs relative resets in coordination with keyframe declarations. In addition to the front-end development, a method is provided to account for front-end velocity bias in the back-end optimization. Finally a method is presented for enabling multiple vehicles to improve navigational accuracy by cooperatively sharing information. Modifications to the relative navigation architecture are presented that enable decentralized, cooperative operations amidst temporary communication dropouts. The proposed framework also includes the ability to incorporate inter-vehicle measurements and utilizes a new concept called the coordinated reset, which is necessary for optimizing the cooperative odometry and improving localization. Each contribution is demonstrated through simulation and/or hardware flight testing. Simulation and Monte-Carlo testing is used to show the expected quality of the results. Hardware flight-test results show the front-end estimator performance, several back-end optimization examples, and cooperative GPS-denied operations.
74

Enabling Autonomous Operation of Micro Aerial Vehicles Through GPS to GPS-Denied Transitions

Jackson, James Scott 11 November 2019 (has links)
Micro aerial vehicles and other autonomous systems have the potential to truly transform life as we know it, however much of the potential of autonomous systems remains unrealized because reliable navigation is still an unsolved problem with significant challenges. This dissertation presents solutions to many aspects of autonomous navigation. First, it presents ROSflight, a software and hardware architure that allows for rapid prototyping and experimentation of autonomy algorithms on MAVs with lightweight, efficient flight control. Next, this dissertation presents improvments to the state-of-the-art in optimal control of quadrotors by utilizing the error-state formulation frequently utilized in state estimation. It is shown that performing optimal control directly over the error-state results in a vastly more computationally efficient system than competing methods while also dealing with the non-vector rotation components of the state in a principled way. In addition, real-time robust flight planning is considered with a method to navigate cluttered, potentially unknown scenarios with real-time obstacle avoidance. Robust state estimation is a critical component to reliable operation, and this dissertation focuses on improving the robustness of visual-inertial state estimation in a filtering framework by extending the state-of-the-art to include better modeling and sensor fusion. Further, this dissertation takes concepts from the visual-inertial estimation community and applies it to tightly-coupled GNSS, visual-inertial state estimation. This method is shown to demonstrate significantly more reliable state estimation than visual-inertial or GNSS-inertial state estimation alone in a hardware experiment through a GNSS-GNSS denied transition flying under a building and back out into open sky. Finally, this dissertation explores a novel method to combine measurements from multiple agents into a coherent map. Traditional approaches to this problem attempt to solve for the position of multiple agents at specific times in their trajectories. This dissertation instead attempts to solve this problem in a relative context, resulting in a much more robust approach that is able to handle much greater intial error than traditional approaches.
75

Through the Blur with Deep Learning : A Comparative Study Assessing Robustness in Visual Odometry Techniques

Berglund, Alexander January 2023 (has links)
In this thesis, the robustness of deep learning techniques in the field of visual odometry is investigated, with a specific focus on the impact of motion blur. A comparative study is conducted, evaluating the performance of state-of-the-art deep convolutional neural network methods, namely DF-VO and DytanVO, against ORB-SLAM3, a well-established non-deep-learning technique for visual simultaneous localization and mapping. The objective is to quantitatively assess the performance of these models as a function of motion blur. The evaluation is carried out on a custom synthetic dataset, which simulates a camera navigating through a forest environment. The dataset includes trajectories with varying degrees of motion blur, caused by camera translation, and optionally, pitch and yaw rotational noise. The results demonstrate that deep learning-based methods maintained robust performance despite the challenging conditions presented in the test data, while excessive blur lead to tracking failures in the geometric model. This suggests that the ability of deep neural network architectures to automatically learn hierarchical feature representations and capture complex, abstract features may enhance the robustness of deep learning-based visual odometry techniques in challenging conditions, compared to their geometric counterparts.
76

Creating Good User Experience in a Hand-Gesture-Based Augmented Reality Game / Användbarhet i ett handgestbaserat AR-spel

Lam, Benny, Nilsson, Jakob January 2019 (has links)
The dissemination of new innovative technology requires feasibility and simplicity. The problem with marker-based augmented reality is similar to glove-based hand gesture recognition: they both require an additional component to function. This thesis investigates the possibility of combining markerless augmented reality together with appearance-based hand gesture recognition by implementing a game with good user experience. The methods employed in this research consist of a game implementation and a pre-study meant for measuring interactive accuracy and precision, and for deciding upon which gestures should be utilized in the game. A test environment was realized in Unity using ARKit and Manomotion SDK. Similarly, the implementation of the game used the same development tools. However, Blender was used for creating the 3D models. The results from 15 testers showed that the pinching gesture was the most favorable one. The game was evaluated with a System Usability Scale (SUS) and received a score of 70.77 among 12 game testers, which indicates that the augmented reality game, which interaction method is solely based on bare-hands, can be quite enjoyable.

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