ROAICVLGNIMay 8, 2025

AI and Vision based Autonomous Navigation of Nano-Drones in Partially-Known Environments

arXiv:2505.04972v14 citationsh-index: 32025 21st International Conference on Distributed Computing in Smart Systems and the Internet of Things (DCOSS-IoT)
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This enables safe autonomous flight for resource-limited nano-drones in applications like exploration and surveillance, though it is an incremental improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackled autonomous navigation for a 30-gram nano-drone in partially-known environments by proposing an AI-aided vision-based reactive planning method, achieving real-time command at ~8 fps and a COCO mAP of 60.8, with field tests showing obstacle avoidance at 1 m/s.

The miniaturisation of sensors and processors, the advancements in connected edge intelligence, and the exponential interest in Artificial Intelligence are boosting the affirmation of autonomous nano-size drones in the Internet of Robotic Things ecosystem. However, achieving safe autonomous navigation and high-level tasks such as exploration and surveillance with these tiny platforms is extremely challenging due to their limited resources. This work focuses on enabling the safe and autonomous flight of a pocket-size, 30-gram platform called Crazyflie 2.1 in a partially known environment. We propose a novel AI-aided, vision-based reactive planning method for obstacle avoidance under the ambit of Integrated Sensing, Computing and Communication paradigm. We deal with the constraints of the nano-drone by splitting the navigation task into two parts: a deep learning-based object detector runs on the edge (external hardware) while the planning algorithm is executed onboard. The results show the ability to command the drone at $\sim8$ frames-per-second and a model performance reaching a COCO mean-average-precision of $60.8$. Field experiments demonstrate the feasibility of the solution with the drone flying at a top speed of $1$ m/s while steering away from an obstacle placed in an unknown position and reaching the target destination. The outcome highlights the compatibility of the communication delay and the model performance with the requirements of the real-time navigation task. We provide a feasible alternative to a fully onboard implementation that can be extended to autonomous exploration with nano-drones.

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