Optimal Target Shape for LiDAR Pose Estimation
This work addresses a domain-specific problem for robotics and autonomous systems by improving LiDAR-based pose estimation in cluttered environments.
The paper tackles pose ambiguity and quantization uncertainty in LiDAR pose estimation by optimizing target shapes to induce large gradients at edge points, achieving centimeter translation errors and a few degrees rotation errors at 30 meters.
Targets are essential in problems such as object tracking in cluttered or textureless environments, camera (and multi-sensor) calibration tasks, and simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM). Target shapes for these tasks typically are symmetric (square, rectangular, or circular) and work well for structured, dense sensor data such as pixel arrays (i.e., image). However, symmetric shapes lead to pose ambiguity when using sparse sensor data such as LiDAR point clouds and suffer from the quantization uncertainty of the LiDAR. This paper introduces the concept of optimizing target shape to remove pose ambiguity for LiDAR point clouds. A target is designed to induce large gradients at edge points under rotation and translation relative to the LiDAR to ameliorate the quantization uncertainty associated with point cloud sparseness. Moreover, given a target shape, we present a means that leverages the target's geometry to estimate the target's vertices while globally estimating the pose. Both the simulation and the experimental results (verified by a motion capture system) confirm that by using the optimal shape and the global solver, we achieve centimeter error in translation and a few degrees in rotation even when a partially illuminated target is placed 30 meters away. All the implementations and datasets are available at https://github.com/UMich-BipedLab/optimal_shape_global_pose_estimation.