Adrien Gauffriau

AI
5papers
69citations
Novelty23%
AI Score35

5 Papers

CVApr 5, 2023Code
LARD -- Landing Approach Runway Detection -- Dataset for Vision Based Landing

Mélanie Ducoffe, Maxime Carrere, Léo Féliers et al.

As the interest in autonomous systems continues to grow, one of the major challenges is collecting sufficient and representative real-world data. Despite the strong practical and commercial interest in autonomous landing systems in the aerospace field, there is a lack of open-source datasets of aerial images. To address this issue, we present a dataset-lard-of high-quality aerial images for the task of runway detection during approach and landing phases. Most of the dataset is composed of synthetic images but we also provide manually labelled images from real landing footages, to extend the detection task to a more realistic setting. In addition, we offer the generator which can produce such synthetic front-view images and enables automatic annotation of the runway corners through geometric transformations. This dataset paves the way for further research such as the analysis of dataset quality or the development of models to cope with the detection tasks. Find data, code and more up-to-date information at https://github.com/deel-ai/LARD

2.9ARApr 27
Compilation and Execution of an Embeddable YOLO-NAS on the VTA

Anthony Faure-Gignoux, Kevin Delmas, Adrien Gauffriau et al.

Deploying complex Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) on FPGA-based accelerators is a promising way forward for safety-critical domains such as aeronautics. In a previous work, we have explored the Versatile Tensor Accelerator (VTA) and showed its suitability for avionic applications. For that, we developed an initial stand-alone compiler designed with certification in mind. However, this compiler still suffers from some limitations that are overcome in this paper. The contributions consist in extending and fully automating the VTA compilation chain to allow complete CNN compilation and support larger CNNs (which parameters do not fit in the on-chip memory). The effectiveness is demonstrated by the successful compilation and simulated execution of a YOLO-NAS object detection model.

AIJun 20, 2024
How to design a dataset compliant with an ML-based system ODD?

Cyril Cappi, Noémie Cohen, Mélanie Ducoffe et al.

This paper focuses on a Vision-based Landing task and presents the design and the validation of a dataset that would comply with the Operational Design Domain (ODD) of a Machine-Learning (ML) system. Relying on emerging certification standards, we describe the process for establishing ODDs at both the system and image levels. In the process, we present the translation of high-level system constraints into actionable image-level properties, allowing for the definition of verifiable Data Quality Requirements (DQRs). To illustrate this approach, we use the Landing Approach Runway Detection (LARD) dataset which combines synthetic imagery and real footage, and we focus on the steps required to verify the DQRs. The replicable framework presented in this paper addresses the challenges of designing a dataset compliant with the stringent needs of ML-based systems certification in safety-critical applications.

AIMar 18, 2021
White Paper Machine Learning in Certified Systems

Hervé Delseny, Christophe Gabreau, Adrien Gauffriau et al.

Machine Learning (ML) seems to be one of the most promising solution to automate partially or completely some of the complex tasks currently realized by humans, such as driving vehicles, recognizing voice, etc. It is also an opportunity to implement and embed new capabilities out of the reach of classical implementation techniques. However, ML techniques introduce new potential risks. Therefore, they have only been applied in systems where their benefits are considered worth the increase of risk. In practice, ML techniques raise multiple challenges that could prevent their use in systems submitted to certification constraints. But what are the actual challenges? Can they be overcome by selecting appropriate ML techniques, or by adopting new engineering or certification practices? These are some of the questions addressed by the ML Certification 3 Workgroup (WG) set-up by the Institut de Recherche Technologique Saint Exupéry de Toulouse (IRT), as part of the DEEL Project.

LGJan 26, 2021
Overestimation learning with guarantees

Adrien Gauffriau, François Malgouyres, Mélanie Ducoffe

We describe a complete method that learns a neural network which is guaranteed to overestimate a reference function on a given domain. The neural network can then be used as a surrogate for the reference function. The method involves two steps. In the first step, we construct an adaptive set of Majoring Points. In the second step, we optimize a well-chosen neural network to overestimate the Majoring Points. In order to extend the guarantee on the Majoring Points to the whole domain, we necessarily have to make an assumption on the reference function. In this study, we assume that the reference function is monotonic. We provide experiments on synthetic and real problems. The experiments show that the density of the Majoring Points concentrate where the reference function varies. The learned over-estimations are both guaranteed to overestimate the reference function and are proven empirically to provide good approximations of it. Experiments on real data show that the method makes it possible to use the surrogate function in embedded systems for which an underestimation is critical; when computing the reference function requires too many resources.