Luca Lobefaro

2papers

2 Papers

45.2ROApr 16Code
A Robust Approach for LiDAR-Inertial Odometry Without Sensor-Specific Modeling

Meher V. R. Malladi, Tiziano Guadagnino, Luca Lobefaro et al.

Accurate odometry is a critical component in a robotic navigation stack, and subsequent modules such as planning and control often rely on an estimate of the robot's motion. Sensor-based odometry approaches should be robust across sensor types and deployable in different target domains, from solid-state LiDARs mounted on cars in urban-driving scenarios to spinning LiDARs on handheld packages used in unstructured natural environments. In this paper, we propose a robust LiDAR-inertial odometry system that does not rely on sensor-specific modeling. Sensor fusion techniques for LiDAR and inertial measurement unit (IMU) data typically integrate IMU data iteratively in a Kalman filter or use pre-integration in a factor graph framework, combined with LiDAR scan matching often exploiting some form of feature extraction. We propose an alternative strategy that only requires a simplified motion model for IMU integration and directly registers LiDAR scans in a scan-to-map approach. Our approach allows us to impose a novel regularization on the LiDAR registration, improving the overall odometry performance. We detail extensive experiments on a number of datasets covering a wide array of commonly used robotic sensors and platforms. We show that our approach works with the exact same configuration in all these scenarios, demonstrating its robustness. We have open-sourced our implementation so that the community can build further on our work and use it in their navigation stacks.

32.0ROMar 23
Efficient View Planning Guided by Previous-Session Reconstruction for Repeated Plant Monitoring

Sicong Pan, Luca Lobefaro, Moein Taherkhani et al.

Repeated plant monitoring is essential for tracking crop growth, and 3D reconstruction enables consistent comparison across monitoring sessions. However, rebuilding a 3D model from scratch in every session is costly and overlooks informative geometry already observed previously. We propose efficient view planning guided by a previous-session reconstruction, which reuses a 3D model from the previous session to improve active perception in the current session. Based on this previous-session reconstruction, our method replaces iterative next-best-view planning with one-shot view planning that selects an informative set of views and computes the globally shortest execution path connecting them. Experiments on real multi-session datasets, including public single-plant scans and a newly collected greenhouse crop-row dataset, show that our method achieves comparable or higher surface coverage with fewer executed views and shorter robot paths than iterative and one-shot baselines.