ROCVLGSep 20, 2018

OxIOD: The Dataset for Deep Inertial Odometry

arXiv:1809.07491v195 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This dataset enables more effective training and evaluation of deep learning models for inertial odometry, benefiting researchers and developers in robotics, smartphones, and drones by providing a first-of-its-kind resource.

The paper introduces the Oxford Inertial Odometry Dataset (OxIOD), a large and diverse dataset for deep inertial odometry research, containing 158 sequences over 42 km with ground-truth labels to address the lack of labeled data for training deep neural networks in IMU-based navigation tasks.

Advances in micro-electro-mechanical (MEMS) techniques enable inertial measurements units (IMUs) to be small, cheap, energy efficient, and widely used in smartphones, robots, and drones. Exploiting inertial data for accurate and reliable navigation and localization has attracted significant research and industrial interest, as IMU measurements are completely ego-centric and generally environment agnostic. Recent studies have shown that the notorious issue of drift can be significantly alleviated by using deep neural networks (DNNs), e.g. IONet. However, the lack of sufficient labelled data for training and testing various architectures limits the proliferation of adopting DNNs in IMU-based tasks. In this paper, we propose and release the Oxford Inertial Odometry Dataset (OxIOD), a first-of-its-kind data collection for inertial-odometry research, with all sequences having ground-truth labels. Our dataset contains 158 sequences totalling more than 42 km in total distance, much larger than previous inertial datasets. Another notable feature of this dataset lies in its diversity, which can reflect the complex motions of phone-based IMUs in various everyday usage. The measurements were collected with four different attachments (handheld, in the pocket, in the handbag and on the trolley), four motion modes (halting, walking slowly, walking normally, and running), five different users, four types of off-the-shelf consumer phones, and large-scale localization from office buildings. Deep inertial tracking experiments were conducted to show the effectiveness of our dataset in training deep neural network models and evaluate learning-based and model-based algorithms. The OxIOD Dataset is available at: http://deepio.cs.ox.ac.uk

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