DocumentCode
3137963
Title
Corridor Line Detection for Vision Based Indoor Robot Navigation
Author
Shi, Wenxia ; Samarabandu, Jagath
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Western Ontario, London, Ont.
fYear
2006
fDate
38838
Firstpage
1988
Lastpage
1991
Abstract
The capability of a mobile robot to negotiate corridors is essential for autonomous navigation in an indoor environment. An approach is proposed for determining the corridor line locations and the vanishing point in a corridor environment using a single camera, based on hypotheses generation/verification and a feedback control strategy. A corridor line is the intersection line between a wall and the floor, which is, the farthest lateral position the autonomous robot can safely navigate in a corridor. There have been numerous approaches described in the literature which detect corridor edges and vanishing point; however, no solution has been reported to detect true corridor line locations in the presence of many spurious linear features around the corridor line. The proposed method consists of low, medium, and high level processing stages which correspond to the extraction of features, the formation of hypotheses, and the verification of hypotheses using a feedback mechanism, respectively. The system has been tested on a large number of real corridor images captured by a moving robot in a corridor. The experimental results demonstrated the reliability and robustness of the approach with respect to different viewpoints, reflection variations and different illumination conditions
Keywords
edge detection; feature extraction; feedback; image recognition; mobile robots; navigation; path planning; robot vision; autonomous navigation; camera; corridor line detection; feedback control; feedback mechanism; indoor robot navigation; mobile robot; Cameras; Feature extraction; Feedback control; Image edge detection; Indoor environments; Mobile robots; Navigation; Robot vision systems; Robustness; System testing; Corridor line location; feedback control strategy; hypothesis generation/verification; robot navigation; vanishing point;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2006. CCECE '06. Canadian Conference on
Conference_Location
Ottawa, Ont.
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0038-4
Electronic_ISBN
1-4244-0038-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CCECE.2006.277812
Filename
4054741
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