CVMar 3, 2023
Quantifying the LiDAR Sim-to-Real Domain Shift: A Detailed Investigation Using Object Detectors and Analyzing Point Clouds at Target-LevelSebastian Huch, Luca Scalerandi, Esteban Rivera et al.
LiDAR object detection algorithms based on neural networks for autonomous driving require large amounts of data for training, validation, and testing. As real-world data collection and labeling are time-consuming and expensive, simulation-based synthetic data generation is a viable alternative. However, using simulated data for the training of neural networks leads to a domain shift of training and testing data due to differences in scenes, scenarios, and distributions. In this work, we quantify the sim-to-real domain shift by means of LiDAR object detectors trained with a new scenario-identical real-world and simulated dataset. In addition, we answer the questions of how well the simulated data resembles the real-world data and how well object detectors trained on simulated data perform on real-world data. Further, we analyze point clouds at the target-level by comparing real-world and simulated point clouds within the 3D bounding boxes of the targets. Our experiments show that a significant sim-to-real domain shift exists even for our scenario-identical datasets. This domain shift amounts to an average precision reduction of around 14 % for object detectors trained with simulated data. Additional experiments reveal that this domain shift can be lowered by introducing a simple noise model in simulation. We further show that a simple downsampling method to model real-world physics does not influence the performance of the object detectors.
CVMay 11, 2023
DeepSTEP -- Deep Learning-Based Spatio-Temporal End-To-End Perception for Autonomous VehiclesSebastian Huch, Florian Sauerbeck, Johannes Betz
Autonomous vehicles demand high accuracy and robustness of perception algorithms. To develop efficient and scalable perception algorithms, the maximum information should be extracted from the available sensor data. In this work, we present our concept for an end-to-end perception architecture, named DeepSTEP. The deep learning-based architecture processes raw sensor data from the camera, LiDAR, and RaDAR, and combines the extracted data in a deep fusion network. The output of this deep fusion network is a shared feature space, which is used by perception head networks to fulfill several perception tasks, such as object detection or local mapping. DeepSTEP incorporates multiple ideas to advance state of the art: First, combining detection and localization into a single pipeline allows for efficient processing to reduce computational overhead and further improves overall performance. Second, the architecture leverages the temporal domain by using a self-attention mechanism that focuses on the most important features. We believe that our concept of DeepSTEP will advance the development of end-to-end perception systems. The network will be deployed on our research vehicle, which will be used as a platform for data collection, real-world testing, and validation. In conclusion, DeepSTEP represents a significant advancement in the field of perception for autonomous vehicles. The architecture's end-to-end design, time-aware attention mechanism, and integration of multiple perception tasks make it a promising solution for real-world deployment. This research is a work in progress and presents the first concept of establishing a novel perception pipeline.
ROFeb 8, 2022
Indy Autonomous Challenge -- Autonomous Race Cars at the Handling LimitsAlexander Wischnewski, Maximilian Geisslinger, Johannes Betz et al.
Motorsport has always been an enabler for technological advancement, and the same applies to the autonomous driving industry. The team TUM Auton-omous Motorsports will participate in the Indy Autonomous Challenge in Octo-ber 2021 to benchmark its self-driving software-stack by racing one out of ten autonomous Dallara AV-21 racecars at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The first part of this paper explains the reasons for entering an autonomous vehicle race from an academic perspective: It allows focusing on several edge cases en-countered by autonomous vehicles, such as challenging evasion maneuvers and unstructured scenarios. At the same time, it is inherently safe due to the motor-sport related track safety precautions. It is therefore an ideal testing ground for the development of autonomous driving algorithms capable of mastering the most challenging and rare situations. In addition, we provide insight into our soft-ware development workflow and present our Hardware-in-the-Loop simulation setup. It is capable of running simulations of up to eight autonomous vehicles in real time. The second part of the paper gives a high-level overview of the soft-ware architecture and covers our development priorities in building a high-per-formance autonomous racing software: maximum sensor detection range, relia-ble handling of multi-vehicle situations, as well as reliable motion control under uncertainty.