The researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Department of Mechanical Engineering specialises in SLAM, or simultaneous localisation and mapping, the technique whereby mobile autonomous robots map their environments and determine their locations.
The new study demonstrates how SLAM can be used to improve object-recognition systems.
The system uses SLAM information to augment existing object-recognition algorithms. Its performance should thus continue to improve as computer-vision researchers develop better recognition software, and roboticists develop better SLAM software.
Since the system can fuse information captured from different camera angles, it fares much better than object-recognition systems trying to identify objects in still images.
On the basis of a preliminary analysis of colour transitions, they divide an image into rectangular regions that probably contain objects of some sort.
Then they run a recognition algorithm on just the pixels inside each rectangle.
A classical object-recognition system may have to redraw those rectangles thousands of times. From some perspectives, two objects standing next to each other might look like one, particularly if they're similarly coloured.
Since a SLAM map is three-dimensional distinguishing objects better than single-perspective analysis.
The SLAM data let the system correlate the segmentation of images captured from different perspectives. Analysing image segments that likely depict the same objects from different angles improves the system's performance.
Pillai is now investigating whether object detection can similarly aid SLAM. One of the central challenges in SLAM is what roboticists call "loop closure."
As a robot builds a map of its environment, it may find itself somewhere it's already been - entering a room, say, from a different door, researchers said.
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