Occupancy grid maps are widely used as an environment model that allows the fusion of different range sensor technologies in real-time for robotics applications. In an autonomous vehicle setting, occupancy grid maps are especially useful for their ability to accurately represent the position of surrounding obstacles while being robust to discrepancies between the fused sensors through the use of occupancy probabilities representing uncertainty. In this article, we propose to evaluate the applicability of real-time vehicle detection on occupancy grid maps. State of the art detectors in sensor-specific domains such as YOLOv2/YOLOv3 for images or PIXOR for LiDAR point clouds are modified to use occupancy grid maps as input and produce oriented bounding boxes enclosing vehicles as output. The five proposed detectors are trained on the Waymo Open automotive dataset and compared regarding the quality of their detections measured in terms of Average Precision (AP) and their real-time capabilities measured in Frames Per Second (FPS). Of the five detectors presented, one inspired from the PIXOR backbone reaches the highest AP0.7 of 0.82 and runs at 20 FPS. Comparatively, two other proposed detectors inspired from YOLOv2 achieve an almost as good, with a AP0.7 of 0.79 while running at 91 FPS. These results validate the feasibility of real-time vehicle detection on occupancy grids.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9921887PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s23031613DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

occupancy grid
20
grid maps
20
vehicle detection
12
detection occupancy
12
real-time vehicle
8
proposed detectors
8
occupancy
7
grid
5
maps
5
detectors
5

Similar Publications

Unlabelled: iKaluk, Inuttitut for Arctic charr (), holds significant commercial and cultural value for Inuit communities throughout Nunatsiavut. Studies evaluating iKaluk habitat associations in freshwater are plentiful; however, there is limited information on the ecological makeup and sediment characteristics of anadromous charr habitats in marine environments. This study investigated the benthic associations of Arctic charr during their marine residency period in Nain, Nunatsiavut, using underwater videos, harvester-identified fishing locations, and acoustic telemetry.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Predicting electronic screening for fast Koopmans spectral functional calculations.

NPJ Comput Mater

December 2024

Center for Scientific Computing, Theory and Data, Paul Scherrer Institute, 5352 Villigen PSI, Switzerland.

Koopmans spectral functionals are a powerful extension of Kohn-Sham density-functional theory (DFT) that enables the prediction of spectral properties with state-of-the-art accuracy. The success of these functionals relies on capturing the effects of electronic screening through scalar, orbital-dependent parameters. These parameters have to be computed for every calculation, making Koopmans spectral functionals more expensive than their DFT counterparts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Brain state and dynamic transition patterns of motor imagery revealed by the bayes hidden markov model.

Cogn Neurodyn

October 2024

Mental Health Education Center and School of Science, Xihua University, Chengdu, 610039 China.

Unlabelled: Motor imagery (MI) is a high-level cognitive process that has been widely applied to brain-computer inference (BCI) and motor recovery. In practical applications, however, huge individual differences and unclear neural mechanisms have seriously hindered the application of MI and BCI systems. Thus, it is urgently needed to explore MI from a new perspective.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The size of the solution space associated with the trip-matching problem has made the search for high-order ride-pooling prohibitive. We introduce hyper-pooled rides along with a method to identify them within urban demand patterns. Travellers of hyper-pooled rides walk to common pick-up points, travel with a shared vehicle along a sequence of stops and are dropped off at stops from which they walk to their destinations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Large mammals with general habitat needs can persist throughout mixed used landscapes, however, human-wildlife conflict frequently leads to their restriction to protected areas. Conservation efforts, especially for reducing conflicts with humans, can enhance tolerance of humans towards species like Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) in human-dominated landscapes. Here, we examine how elephant use in the Chure Terai Madhesh Landscape (CTML) covering the entire elephant range of Nepal changed between 2012 and 2020 in relationship to protection status and environmental conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!