QSRNet: Estimating Qualitative Spatial Representations from RGB-D Images
Sang Uk Lee, Sungkweon Hong, Andreas Hofmann, Brian Williams
- Year
- 2020
- Citations
- 3
Abstract
Humans perceive and describe their surroundings with qualitative statements (e.g., "Alice's hand is in contact with a bottle."), rather than quantitative values (e.g., 6-D poses of Alice's hand and a bottle). Qualitative spatial representation (QSR) is a framework that represents the spatial information of objects in a qualitative manner. Region connection calculus (RCC), qualitative trajectory calculus (QTC), and qualitative distance calculus (QDC) are some popular QSR calculi. With the recent development of computer vision, it is important to compute QSR calculi from the visual inputs (e.g., RGB-D images). In fact, many QSR application domains (e.g., human activity recognition (HAR) in robotics) involve visual inputs. We propose a qualitative spatial representation network (QSRNet) that computes the three QSR calculi (i.e., RCC, QTC, and QDC) from the RGB-D images. QSRNet has the following novel contributions. First, QSRNet models the dependencies among the three QSR calculi. We introduce the dependencies as kinematics for QSR because they are analogous to the kinematics in classical mechanics. Second, QSRNet applies the 3-D point cloud instance segmentation to compute the QSR calculi. The experimental results show that QSRNet improves the accuracy in comparison to the other state-of-the-art techniques.
Keywords
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