ROCVAug 21, 2018

Estimating Metric Poses of Dynamic Objects Using Monocular Visual-Inertial Fusion

arXiv:1808.06753v11 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the scale estimation challenge for dynamic object tracking in applications like mobile AR, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing visual-inertial systems.

The paper tackles the problem of scale ambiguity in monocular 3D object tracking by proposing a method to recover metric scale using visual-inertial fusion, achieving continuous 6-DoF pose estimation without scale ambiguity as demonstrated in experiments with ground truth comparisons.

A monocular 3D object tracking system generally has only up-to-scale pose estimation results without any prior knowledge of the tracked object. In this paper, we propose a novel idea to recover the metric scale of an arbitrary dynamic object by optimizing the trajectory of the objects in the world frame, without motion assumptions. By introducing an additional constraint in the time domain, our monocular visual-inertial tracking system can obtain continuous six degree of freedom (6-DoF) pose estimation without scale ambiguity. Our method requires neither fixed multi-camera nor depth sensor settings for scale observability, instead, the IMU inside the monocular sensing suite provides scale information for both camera itself and the tracked object. We build the proposed system on top of our monocular visual-inertial system (VINS) to obtain accurate state estimation of the monocular camera in the world frame. The whole system consists of a 2D object tracker, an object region-based visual bundle adjustment (BA), VINS and a correlation analysis-based metric scale estimator. Experimental comparisons with ground truth demonstrate the tracking accuracy of our 3D tracking performance while a mobile augmented reality (AR) demo shows the feasibility of potential applications.

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