Robust Place Recognition using an Imaging Lidar
This work addresses place recognition for robotics and autonomous systems by integrating lidar and camera advantages, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing bag-of-words and feature matching techniques.
The authors tackled robust place recognition by combining imaging lidar and visual features to achieve rotation-invariant performance, handling reverse and upside-down revisiting, and validated it on diverse datasets with real-time capability.
We propose a methodology for robust, real-time place recognition using an imaging lidar, which yields image-quality high-resolution 3D point clouds. Utilizing the intensity readings of an imaging lidar, we project the point cloud and obtain an intensity image. ORB feature descriptors are extracted from the image and encoded into a bag-of-words vector. The vector, used to identify the point cloud, is inserted into a database that is maintained by DBoW for fast place recognition queries. The returned candidate is further validated by matching visual feature descriptors. To reject matching outliers, we apply PnP, which minimizes the reprojection error of visual features' positions in Euclidean space with their correspondences in 2D image space, using RANSAC. Combining the advantages from both camera and lidar-based place recognition approaches, our method is truly rotation-invariant, and can tackle reverse revisiting and upside down revisiting. The proposed method is evaluated on datasets gathered from a variety of platforms over different scales and environments. Our implementation and datasets are available at https://git.io/image-lidar