4.6 Article

Point Cloud Compression: Impact on Object Detection in Outdoor Contexts

期刊

SENSORS
卷 22, 期 15, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22155767

关键词

point cloud; lossy compression; object detection; depth maps; depth filtering; machine learning

资金

  1. Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) [POCI-01-0145-FEDER-031527]
  2. Institute of Systems and Robotics, University of Coimbra (ISR-UC) through FCT [UIDB/00048/2020]
  3. Instituto de Telecomunicacoes (IT) under FCT [UIDB/EEA/50008/2020, LA/P/0109/2020]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The increasing demand for reliable and safe autonomous driving requires more granular data for object detection. Offloading computation to roadside infrastructure and compressing voluminous sensor data for transmission are solutions to the computational complexity challenges. Results indicate that point cloud compression has a minor impact on object detection performance, especially for larger objects, showing a competitive advantage when using depth maps for object detection.
Increasing demand for more reliable and safe autonomous driving means that data involved in the various aspects of perception, such as object detection, will become more granular as the number and resolution of sensors progress. Using these data for on-the-fly object detection causes problems related to the computational complexity of onboard processing in autonomous vehicles, leading to a desire to offload computation to roadside infrastructure using vehicle-to-infrastructure communication links. The need to transmit sensor data also arises in the context of vehicle fleets exchanging sensor data, over vehicle-to-vehicle communication links. Some types of sensor data modalities, such as Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) point clouds, are so voluminous that their transmission is impractical without data compression. With most emerging autonomous driving implementations being anchored on point cloud data, we propose to evaluate the impact of point cloud compression on object detection. To that end, two different object detection architectures are evaluated using point clouds from the KITTI object dataset: raw point clouds and point clouds compressed with a state-of-the-art encoder and three different compression levels. The analysis is extended to the impact of compression on depth maps generated from images projected from the point clouds, with two conversion methods tested. Results show that low-to-medium levels of compression do not have a major impact on object detection performance, especially for larger objects. Results also show that the impact of point cloud compression is lower when detecting objects using depth maps, placing this particular method of point cloud data representation on a competitive footing compared to raw point cloud data.

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