Obstacle Aware Sampling for Path Planning
This addresses the problem of computational inefficiency in robotic path planning for applications like autonomous navigation, though it is an incremental improvement over existing sampling methods.
The paper tackles the problem of inefficient sampling in path planning when obstacles are unknown by proposing a pre-processing algorithm that identifies and removes obstacles from the sampling space, resulting in significant improvements in time and path length for planners based on Rapidly-exploring random trees.
Many path planning algorithms are based on sampling the state space. While this approach is very simple, it can become costly when the obstacles are unknown, since samples hitting these obstacles are wasted. The goal of this paper is to efficiently identify obstacles in a map and remove them from the sampling space. To this end, we propose a pre-processing algorithm for space exploration that enables more efficient sampling. We show that it can boost the performance of other space sampling methods and path planners. Our approach is based on the fact that a convex obstacle can be approximated provably well by its minimum volume enclosing ellipsoid (MVEE), and a non-convex obstacle may be partitioned into convex shapes. Our main contribution is an algorithm that strategically finds a small sample, called the \emph{active-coreset}, that adaptively samples the space via membership-oracle such that the MVEE of the coreset approximates the MVEE of the obstacle. Experimental results confirm the effectiveness of our approach across multiple planners based on Rapidly-exploring random trees, showing significant improvement in terms of time and path length.