Tom Duckett and Ulrich Nehmzow
Mobile Robot Self-Localisation
and Measurement of Performance in Middle-Scale Environments
Robotics and Autonomous Systems (RAS), Vol. 24, Nos.
1-2, pp. 57-69, 1998.
Abstract
This paper addresses the question of self-localisation in autonomous mobile
robot navigation, i.e., the task of identifying places after previous exploration
and map building by the robot. We present a novel localisation system which
accumulates both exteroceptive and proprioceptive sensory evidence over
time to localise, without requiring prior knowledge of the robot's position.
We show that the system relocalises successfully on a real robot in middle-scale
environments containing transient changes such as moving people. In addition,
a general performance metric and a standard experimental procedure are
introduced, allowing disparate localisation systems to be compared on the
same robot in the same environment. To demonstrate the utility of the approach
taken, we test the evidence-based localisation system in six different
environments, comparing its performance to that of localisation using dead
reckoning or currently observable landmarks alone. In addition, the results
provide us with some useful quantitative measures for characterising different
environments.
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Bibtex
@ARTICLE{DuckettRAS98,
AUTHOR = "{Duckett}, Tom and {Nehmzow}, Ulrich",
TITLE = "Mobile Robot Self-Localisation and Measurement of Performance in Middle Scale Environments",
JOURNAL = "Robotics and Autonomous Systems",
VOLUME = 24,
NUMBER = {1--2},
PAGES = {57--69},
YEAR = 1998
}