Tom Duckett and Ulrich Nehmzow
Knowing Your Place in Real World Environments
Proc. EUROBOT '99, 3rd European Workshop on Advanced Mobile Robots,
Abstract
The topic of mobile robot self-localisation is usually divided
into the sub-problems of global localisation and position
tracking.
Both are now well understood individually, but few mobile
robots can deal simultaneously with the two problems
in large, complex environments.
While efficient solutions have been found for metric maps,
topological maps have, by nature of their compactness, the
potential for representing environments which are several
orders of magnitude larger than those which can be
tractably navigated using metric maps.
In this paper, we present a unified approach to global
localisation and position tracking which is based on a
topological map augmented with metric information.
The method was validated through a series of experiments
conducted in four real world environments, including its
integration into a complete navigating mobile robot.
Quantitative performance measures were used to assess
localisation quality versus computational efficiency.
The results show that our robot can localise and navigate
reliably in large, complex environments using only minimal
computational resources.
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Bibtex
@INPROCEEDINGS{DuckettEURO99,
AUTHOR = "Tom {Duckett} and Ulrich {Nehmzow}",
TITLE = "Knowing Your Place in Real World Environments",
BOOKTITLE = "Proceedings of EUROBOT '99, 3rd European Workshop on Advanced Mobile Robots",
PUBLISHER = "IEEE Computer Press",
PAGES = {135--142},
YEAR = 1999,
}