CVFeb 1, 2024
YOLinO++: Single-Shot Estimation of Generic Polylines for Mapless Automated DivingAnnika Meyer, Christoph Stiller
In automated driving, highly accurate maps are commonly used to support and complement perception. These maps are costly to create and quickly become outdated as the traffic world is permanently changing. In order to support or replace the map of an automated system with detections from sensor data, a perception module must be able to detect the map features. We propose a neural network that follows the one shot philosophy of YOLO but is designed for detection of 1D structures in images, such as lane boundaries. We extend previous ideas by a midpoint based line representation and anchor definitions. This representation can be used to describe lane borders, markings, but also implicit features such as centerlines of lanes. The broad applicability of the approach is shown with the detection performance on lane centerlines, lane borders as well as the markings both on highways and in urban areas. Versatile lane boundaries are detected and can be inherently classified as dashed or solid lines, curb, road boundaries, or implicit delimitation.
CVMar 26, 2021
YOLinO: Generic Single Shot Polyline Detection in Real TimeAnnika Meyer, Philipp Skudlik, Jan-Hendrik Pauls et al.
The detection of polylines is usually either bound to branchless polylines or formulated in a recurrent way, prohibiting their use in real-time systems. We propose an approach that builds upon the idea of single shot object detection. Reformulating the problem of polyline detection as a bottom-up composition of small line segments allows to detect bounded, dashed and continuous polylines with a single head. This has several major advantages over previous methods. Not only is the method at 187 fps more than suited for real-time applications with virtually any restriction on the shapes of the detected polylines. By predicting multiple line segments for each cell, even branching or crossing polylines can be detected. We evaluate our approach on three different applications for road marking, lane border and center line detection. Hereby, we demonstrate the ability to generalize to different domains as well as both implicit and explicit polyline detection tasks.
ROJul 14, 2020
Fast Lane-Level Intersection Estimation using Markov Chain Monte Carlo Sampling and B-Spline RefinementAnnika Meyer, Jonas Walter, Martin Lauer
Estimating the current scene and understanding the potential maneuvers are essential capabilities of automated vehicles. Most approaches rely heavily on the correctness of maps, but neglect the possibility of outdated information. We present an approach that is able to estimate lanes without relying on any map prior. The estimation is based solely on the trajectories of other traffic participants and is thereby able to incorporate complex environments. In particular, we are able to estimate the scene in the presence of heavy traffic and occlusions. The algorithm first estimates a coarse lane-level intersection model by Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling and refines it later by aligning the lane course with the measurements using a non-linear least squares formulation. We model the lanes as 1D cubic B-splines and can achieve error rates of less than 10cm within real-time.
CVJun 6, 2019
Anytime Lane-Level Intersection Estimation Based on Trajectories of Other Traffic ParticipantsAnnika Meyer, Jonas Walter, Martin Lauer et al.
Estimating and understanding the current scene is an inevitable capability of automated vehicles. Usually, maps are used as prior for interpreting sensor measurements in order to drive safely and comfortably. Only few approaches take into account that maps might be outdated and lead to wrong assumptions on the environment. This work estimates a lane-level intersection topology without any map prior by observing the trajectories of other traffic participants. We are able to deliver both a coarse lane-level topology as well as the lane course inside and outside of the intersection using Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling. The model is neither limited to a number of lanes or arms nor to the topology of the intersection. We present our results on an evaluation set of 1000 simulated intersections and achieve 99.9% accuracy on the topology estimation that takes only 36ms, when utilizing tracked object detections. The precise lane course on these intersections is estimated with an error of 15cm on average after 140ms. Our approach shows a similar level of precision on 14 real-world intersections with 18cm average deviation on simple intersections and 27cm for more complex scenarios. Here the estimation takes only 113ms in total.
ROJul 3, 2018
Tackling Occlusions & Limited Sensor Range with Set-based Safety VerificationPiotr Franciszek Orzechowski, Annika Meyer, Martin Lauer
Provable safety is one of the most critical challenges in automated driving. The behavior of numerous traffic participants in a scene cannot be predicted reliably due to complex interdependencies and the indiscriminate behavior of humans. Additionally, we face high uncertainties and only incomplete environment knowledge. Recent approaches minimize risk with probabilistic and machine learning methods - even under occlusions. These generate comfortable behavior with good traffic flow, but cannot guarantee safety of their maneuvers. Therefore, we contribute a safety verification method for trajectories under occlusions. The field-of-view of the ego vehicle and a map are used to identify critical sensing field edges, each representing a potentially hidden obstacle. The state of occluded obstacles is unknown, but can be over-approximated by intervals over all possible states. Then set-based methods are extended to provide occupancy predictions for obstacles with state intervals. The proposed method can verify the safety of given trajectories (e.g. if they ensure collision-free fail-safe maneuver options) w.r.t. arbitrary safe-state formulations. The potential for provably safe trajectory planning is shown in three evaluative scenarios.