Abstract

In this paper we present a novel, condition-invariant place recognition algorithm inspired by recent discoveries in human visual neuroscience. The algorithm combines intolerant but fast low resolution whole image matching with highly tolerant, sub-image patch matching processes. The approach does not require prior training and works on single images, alleviating the need for either a velocity signal or image sequence, differentiating it from current state of the art methods. We conduct an exhaustive set of experiments evaluating the relationship between place recognition performance and computational resources using part of the challenging Alderley sunny day - rainy night dataset, which has only been previously solved by integrating over 320 frame long image sequences. We achieve recall rates of up to 51% at 100% precision, matching places that have undergone drastic perceptual change while rejecting match hypotheses between highly aliased images of different places. Human trials demonstrate the performance is approaching human capability. The results provide a new benchmark for single image, condition-invariant place recognition.

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