LoST? Appearance-Invariant Place Recognition for Opposite Viewpoints using Visual Semantics

Date

2018

Authors

Garg, S.
Suenderhauf, N.
Milford, M.

Editors

KressGazit, H.
Srinivasa, S.
Howard, T.
Atanasov, N.

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Conference paper

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Proceedings of Robotics: Science and Systems XIV (RSS 2018), 2018 / KressGazit, H., Srinivasa, S., Howard, T., Atanasov, N. (ed./s), vol.2018, pp.1-10

Statement of Responsibility

Sourav Garg, Niko Suenderhauf and Michael Milford

Conference Name

Robotics: Science and Systems XIV (RSS) (26 Jun 2018 - 30 Jun 2018 : Pittsburgh, PA, USA)

Abstract

Human visual scene understanding is so remarkable that we are able to recognize a revisited place when entering it from the opposite direction it was first visited, even in the presence of extreme variations in appearance. This capability is especially apparent during driving: a human driver can recognize where they are when traveling in the reverse direction along a route for the first time, without having to turn back and look. The difficulty of this problem exceeds any addressed in past appearance- and viewpoint-invariant visual place recognition (VPR) research, in part because large parts of the scene are not commonly observable from opposite directions. Consequently, as shown in this paper, the precision-recall performance of current state-of-the-art viewpoint- and appearance-invariant VPR techniques is orders of magnitude below what would be usable in a closed-loop system. Current engineered solutions predominantly rely on panoramic camera or LIDAR sensing setups; an eminently suitable engineering solution but one that is clearly very different to how humans navigate, which also has implications for how naturally humans could interact and communicate with the navigation system. In this paper we develop a suite of novel semantic- and appearance-based techniques to enable for the first time high performance place recognition in this challenging scenario. We first propose a novel Local Semantic Tensor (LoST) descriptor of images using the convolutional feature maps from a state-of-the-art dense semantic segmentation network. Then, to verify the spatial semantic arrangement of the top matching candidates, we develop a novel approach for mining semanticallysalient keypoint correspondences. On publicly available benchmark datasets that involve both 180 degree viewpoint change and extreme appearance change, we show how meaningful recall at 100% precision can be achieved using our proposed system where existing systems often fail to ever reach 100% precision. We also present analysis delving into the performance differences between a current and the proposed system, and characterize unique properties of the opposite direction localization problem including the metric matching offset. The source code is available online at https://github.com/oravus/lostX.

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