Vision-Based Road Detection using Contextual Blocks
This addresses road detection for autonomous navigation systems, with an incremental improvement in efficiency.
The paper tackled monocular road detection by introducing contextual blocks to provide contextual information to a classifier, achieving results comparable to state-of-the-art methods on the KITTI benchmark.
Road detection is a fundamental task in autonomous navigation systems. In this paper, we consider the case of monocular road detection, where images are segmented into road and non-road regions. Our starting point is the well-known machine learning approach, in which a classifier is trained to distinguish road and non-road regions based on hand-labeled images. We proceed by introducing the use of "contextual blocks" as an efficient way of providing contextual information to the classifier. Overall, the proposed methodology, including its image feature selection and classifier, was conceived with computational cost in mind, leaving room for optimized implementations. Regarding experiments, we perform a sensible evaluation of each phase and feature subset that composes our system. The results show a great benefit from using contextual blocks and demonstrate their computational efficiency. Finally, we submit our results to the KITTI road detection benchmark achieving scores comparable with state of the art methods.