4.5 Article

Topological map induction using neighbourhood information of places

Journal

AUTONOMOUS ROBOTS
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 405-418

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10514-012-9276-1

Keywords

Autonomous mobile robots; Topological mapping; Colour histograms; Sonar; Neighbourhood information; Perceptual aliasing; Stochastic local search; Particle filter

Funding

  1. Australian Government

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In topological mapping, perceptual aliasing can cause different places to appear indistinguishable to the robot. In case of severely corrupted or non-available odometry information, topological mapping is difficult as the robot is challenged with the loop-closing problem; that is to determine whether it has visited a particular place before. In this article we propose to use neighbourhood information to disambiguate otherwise indistinguishable places. Using neighbourhood information for place disambiguation is an approach that neither depends on a specific choice of sensors nor requires geometric information such as odometry. Local neighbourhood information is extracted from a sequence of observations of visited places. In experiments using either sonar or visual observations from an indoor environment the benefits of using neighbourhood clues for the disambiguation of otherwise identical vertices are demonstrated. Over 90% of the maps we obtain are isomorphic with the ground truth. The choice of the robot's sensors does not impact the results of the experiments much.

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