Automatic Vocabulary and Graph Verification for Accurate Loop Closure Detection
This work addresses the challenge of perceptual aliasing and suboptimal vocabulary scales in BoW-based loop closure detection for robotics and autonomous systems, offering an incremental improvement over existing methods.
The paper tackles the problem of inaccurate loop closure detection in SLAM by proposing an automatic vocabulary building method and a topological graph verification technique, resulting in significant accuracy improvements validated on public datasets.
Localizing pre-visited places during long-term simultaneous localization and mapping, i.e. loop closure detection (LCD), is a crucial technique to correct accumulated inconsistencies. As one of the most effective and efficient solutions, Bag-of-Words (BoW) builds a visual vocabulary to associate features and then detect loops. Most existing approaches that build vocabularies off-line determine scales of the vocabulary by trial-and-error, which often results in unreasonable feature association. Moreover, the accuracy of the algorithm usually declines due to perceptual aliasing, as the BoW-based method ignores the positions of visual features. To overcome these disadvantages, we propose a natural convergence criterion based on the comparison between the radii of nodes and the drifts of feature descriptors, which is then utilized to build the optimal vocabulary automatically. Furthermore, we present a novel topological graph verification method for validating candidate loops so that geometrical positions of the words can be involved with a negligible increase in complexity, which can significantly improve the accuracy of LCD. Experiments on various public datasets and comparisons against several state-of-the-art algorithms verify the performance of our proposed approach.