CVJul 11, 2022

Real-Time And Robust 3D Object Detection with Roadside LiDARs

arXiv:2207.05200v118 citationsh-index: 34
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses perception challenges for connected and automated vehicles in smart cities, though it appears incremental as it builds on an existing 3D detector.

The paper tackles 3D object detection for autonomous driving using roadside LiDARs, achieving real-time inference at 45 Hz (22 ms) and outperforming the baseline detector by a significant margin on multiple datasets.

This work aims to address the challenges in autonomous driving by focusing on the 3D perception of the environment using roadside LiDARs. We design a 3D object detection model that can detect traffic participants in roadside LiDARs in real-time. Our model uses an existing 3D detector as a baseline and improves its accuracy. To prove the effectiveness of our proposed modules, we train and evaluate the model on three different vehicle and infrastructure datasets. To show the domain adaptation ability of our detector, we train it on an infrastructure dataset from China and perform transfer learning on a different dataset recorded in Germany. We do several sets of experiments and ablation studies for each module in the detector that show that our model outperforms the baseline by a significant margin, while the inference speed is at 45 Hz (22 ms). We make a significant contribution with our LiDAR-based 3D detector that can be used for smart city applications to provide connected and automated vehicles with a far-reaching view. Vehicles that are connected to the roadside sensors can get information about other vehicles around the corner to improve their path and maneuver planning and to increase road traffic safety.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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