Dense Map Representations
Scalable Volumentric TSDF and Occupancy Mapping (SRL at Imperial College)
More recently, we have been exploring alternative map representations, such as octrees encoding Truncated Signed Distance Fields (TSDF) or occupancy values in a volumetric manner — which ideally lend themselves to efficient memory usage, fast access and spatial scalability, while they can be immediately interfaced with robotic motion planning. Furthermore, the hierarchical structure allows for the adoption of adaptive resolution mapping, i.e. we would like to represent fine details, when the camera is close to structure, but maintain the ability to map more corsely, when it is far away. This way, aliasing artefacts can be minimised and tracking as well as mapping speed gains are obtained.
Current collaborators:
- Nils Funk (SRL at Imperial College and SLAMcore)
- Dr Juan Tarrio (SLAMcore)
- Dr Pablo F. Alcantarilla (SLAMcore)
- Dr Dimos Tzoumanikas (SRL at Imperial College)
- Emanuele Vespa (previously Performance Optimisation Group at Imperial College, now Magic Leap)
Former collaborators:
- Dr Marija Popovic (previously SRL at Imperial College now University of Bonn)
- Marius Grimm (previously SRL at Imperial College)
- Nikolay Nikolov (previously SRL at Imperial College, now Wayve)
- Prof. Paul Kelly (Performance Optimisation Group at Imperial College)
- Dr Jacek Zienkiewicz (previously Dyson Robotics Lab at Imperial College, now SLAMcore)
Collaboration within the ORCA Hub:
- Dr Maurice Fallon (Oxford)
- Dr Milad Ramezani (Oxford)
- Dr Marco Camurri (Oxford)
- Yiduo Wang (Oxford)
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Dense RGB-D Surfel Mapping (Dyson Robotics Lab at Imperial College)
In work with Thomas Whelan, myself, Renato Salas-Moreno, Ben Glocker and Andrew Davison, we perform RGB-D SLAM with both local and large-scale loop-closures where a dense surfel-map is aligned and deformed in real-time, in order to continuously improve the reconstruction consistency.
As an extension, we also propose to use inertial measurements in the tracking step of ElasticFusion, which can be combined in a probabilistally meaningful way with photometric and geometric cost terms. Similarly, as the availability of acceleration measurements renders the gravity direction globally observable, we may include additional (soft) constraints in the map deformations, such that they remain consistent with gravity. Alternatively, we have also worked with integrating wheel odometry and arm kinematics from a mobile manipulator robot.
Current collaborators:
- Charles F. Houseago (Dyson Robotics Lab at Imperial College)
Former collaborators:
- Tristan Laidlow (Dyson Robotics Lab at Imperial College)
- Dr Michael Bloesch (previously Dyson Robotics Lab at Imperial College, now DeepMind)
- Prof. Andrew Davison (Imperial College)
- Dr Thomas Whelan (previously Dyson Robotics Lab at Imperial College, now Facebook)
- Dr Ben Glocker (Imperial College)
- Dr Renato Salas-Moreno (previously Imperial College, now Vtrus)
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