Person:
Dellaert, Frank

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Publication Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 30
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    A system for wearable audio navigation integrating advanced localization and auditory display
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2009-12-06) Walker, Bruce N. ; Dellaert, Frank
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    Bayesian Surprise and Landmark Detection
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2009-05) Ranganathan, Ananth ; Dellaert, Frank
    Automatic detection of landmarks, usually special places in the environment such as gateways, for topological mapping has proven to be a difficult task. We present the use of Bayesian surprise, introduced in computer vision, for landmark detection. Further, we provide a novel hierarchical, graphical model for the appearance of a place and use this model to perform surprise-based landmark detection. Our scheme is agnostic to the sensor type, and we demonstrate this by implementing a simple laser model for computing surprise. We evaluate our landmark detector using appearance and laser measurements in the context of a topological mapping algorithm, thus demonstrating the practical applicability of the detector.
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    Binding Balls: Fast Detection of Binding Sites Using a Property of Spherical Fourier Transform
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2009) Comin, Matteo ; Guerra, Concettina ; Dellaert, Frank
    The functional prediction of proteins is one of the most challenging problems in modern biology. An established computational technique involves the identification of threedimensional local similarities in proteins. In this article, we present a novel method to quickly identify promising binding sites. Our aim is to efficiently detect putative binding sites without explicitly aligning them. Using the theory of Spherical Harmonics, a candidate binding site is modeled as a Binding Ball. The Binding Ball signature, offered by the Spherical Fourier coefficients, can be efficiently used for a fast detection of putative regions. Our contribution includes the Binding Ball modeling and the definition of a scoring function that does not require aligning candidate regions. Our scoring function can be computed efficiently using a property of Spherical Fourier transform (SFT) that avoids the evaluation of all alignments. Experiments on different ligands show good discrimination power when searching for known binding sites. Moreover, we prove that this method can save up to 40% in time compared with traditional approaches.
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    2007 RoboCup International Symposium
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2008-05) Balch, Tucker ; Dellaert, Frank
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    Place Recognition-Based Fixed-Lag Smoothing for Environments with Unreliable GPS
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2008-05) Mottaghi, Roozbeh ; Kaess, Michael ; Ranganathan, Ananth ; Roberts, Richard ; Dellaert, Frank
    Pose estimation of outdoor robots presents some distinct challenges due to the various uncertainties in the robot sensing and action. In particular, global positioning sensors of outdoor robots do not always work perfectly, causing large drift in the location estimate of the robot. To overcome this common problem, we propose a new approach for global localization using place recognition. First, we learn the location of some arbitrary key places using odometry measurements and GPS measurements only at the start and the end of the robot trajectory. In subsequent runs, when the robot perceives a key place, our fixed-lag smoother fuses odometry measurements with the relative location to the key place to improve its pose estimate. Outdoor mobile robot experiments show that place recognition measurements significantly improve the estimate of the smoother in the absence of GPS measurements.
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    Automatic Landmark Detection for Topological Mapping Using Bayesian Surprise
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2008) Ranganathan, Ananth ; Dellaert, Frank
    Topological maps are graphical representations of the environment consisting of nodes that denote landmarks, and edges that represent the connectivity between the landmarks. Automatic detection of landmarks, usually special places in the environment such as gateways, in a general, sensor-independent manner has proven to be a difficult task. We present a landmark detection scheme based on the notion of “surprise” that addresses these issues. The surprise associated with a measurement is defined as the change in the current model upon updating it using the measurement. We demonstrate that surprise is large when sudden changes in the environment occur, and hence, is a good indicator of landmarks. We evaluate our landmark detector using appearance and laser measurements both qualitatively and quantitatively. Part of this evaluation is performed in the context of a topological mapping algorithm, thus demonstrating the practical applicability of the detector.
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    Stereo Tracking and Three-Point/One-Point Algorithms - A Robust Approach in Visual Odometry
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-10) Ni, Kai ; Dellaert, Frank
    In this paper, we present an approach of calculating visual odometry for outdoor robots equipped with a stereo rig. Instead of the typical feature matching or tracking, we use an improved stereo-tracking method that simultaneously decides the feature displacement in both cameras. Based on the matched features, a three-point algorithm for the resulting quadrifocal setting is carried out in a RANSAC framework to recover the unknown odometry. In addition, the change in rotation can be derived from infinity homography, and the remaining translational unknowns can be obtained even faster consequently . Both approaches are quite robust and deal well with challenging conditions such as wheel slippage.
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    Rao-Blackwellized Importance Sampling of Camera Parameters from Simple User Input with Visibility Preprocessing in Line Space
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-06) Quennesson, Kevin ; Dellaert, Frank
    Users know what they see before where they are: it is more natural to talk about high level visibility information ("I see such object") than about one's location or orientation. In this paper we introduce a method to find in 3D worlds a density of viewpoints of camera locations from high level visibility constraints on objects in this world. Our method is based on Rao-Blackwellized importance sampling. For efficiency purposes, the proposal distribution used for sampling is extracted from a visibility preprocessing technique adapted from computer graphics. We apply the method for finding in a 3D city model of Atlanta the virtual locations of real-world cameras and viewpoints.
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    A Rao-Blackwellized Particle Filter for Topological Mapping
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05) Ranganathan, Ananth ; Dellaert, Frank
    We present a particle filtering algorithm to construct topological maps of an uninstrument environment. The algorithm presented here constructs the posterior on the space of all possible topologies given measurements, and is based on our previous work on a Bayesian inference framework for topological maps [21]. Constructing the posterior solves the perceptual aliasing problem in a general, robust manner. The use of a Rao-Blackwellized Particle Filter (RBPF) for this purpose makes the inference in the space of topologies incremental and run in real-time. The RBPF maintains the joint posterior on topological maps and locations of landmarks. We demonstrate that, using the landmark locations thus obtained, the global metric map can be obtained from the topological map generated by our algorithm through a simple post-processing step. A data-driven proposal is provided to overcome the degeneracy problem inherent in particle filters. The use of a Dirichlet process prior on landmark labels is also a novel aspect of this work. We use laser range scan and odometry measurements to present experimental results on a robot.
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    On-line Learning of the Traversability of Unstructured Terrain for Outdoor Robot Navigation
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006) Oh, Sang Min ; Rehg, James M. ; Dellaert, Frank