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Sensor fusion for flexible human-portable building-scale mapping

Maurice Fallon, Hordur Johannsson, Jonathan Brookshire, Seth Teller, John J. Leonard

Year
2012
Citations
57

Abstract

This paper describes a system enabling rapid multi-floor indoor map building using a body-worn sensor system fusing information from RGB-D cameras, LIDAR, inertial, and barometric sensors. Our work is motivated by rapid response missions by emergency personnel, in which the capability for one or more people to rapidly map a complex indoor environment is essential for public safety. Human-portable mapping raises a number of challenges not encountered in typical robotic mapping applications including complex 6-DOF motion and the traversal of challenging trajectories including stairs or elevators. Our system achieves robust performance in these situations by exploiting state-of-the-art techniques for robust pose graph optimization and loop closure detection. It achieves real-time performance in indoor environments of moderate scale. Experimental results are demonstrated for human-portable mapping of several floors of a university building, demonstrating the system's ability to handle motion up and down stairs and to organize initially disconnected sets of submaps in a complex environment.

Keywords

StairsComputer scienceInertial measurement unitReal-time computingTree traversalSimultaneous localization and mappingTestbedComputer visionArtificial intelligenceElevator

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