Abstract

In the context of 3D mapping, larger and larger point clouds are acquired with lidar sensors. Although pleasing to the eye, dense maps are not necessarily tailored for practical applications. For instance, in a surface inspection scenario, keeping geometric information such as the edges of objects is essential to detect cracks, whereas very dense areas of very little information such as the ground could hinder the main goal of the application. Several strategies exist to address this problem by reducing the number of points. However, they tend to underperform with non-uniform density, large sensor noise, spurious measurements, and large-scale point clouds, which is the case in mobile robotics. This paper presents a novel sampling algorithm based on spectral decomposition analysis to derive local density measures for each geometric primitive. The proposed method, called Spectral Decomposition Filter (SpDF), identifies and preserves geometric information along the topology of point clouds and is able to scale to large environments with a non-uniform density. Finally, qualitative and quantitative experiments verify the feasibility of our method and present a large-scale evaluation of SpDF with other seven point cloud sampling algorithms, in the context of the 3D registration problem using the Iterative Closest Point (ICP) algorithm on real-world datasets. Results show that a compression ratio up to 97 % can be achieved when accepting a registration error within the range accuracy of the sensor, here for large scale environments of less than 2 cm.

Highlights

  • Light Detection And Ranging (Lidar) sensors has recently been widely democratized in robotics applications

  • This paper presents a novel sampling algorithm, named Spectral Decomposition Filter (SpDF), aiming at reducing the number of points while preserving the geometric information along the topology of large-scale point cloud with non-uniform density, large sensor noise, and spurious measurements

  • This method builds on spectral decomposition applied to point clouds in order to obtain a density better suited for robotics applications where geometric information are essentials

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Summary

Introduction

Light Detection And Ranging (Lidar) sensors has recently been widely democratized in robotics applications. These sensors are able to acquire an efficient representation of the environment (i.e., a point cloud), which can be used in localization algorithms, 3D mapping or environments inspection (Stumm et al, 2012). Prior work on lidar-based registration algorithms have been recently used to create larger and larger 3D maps (Pomerleau et al, 2014). The sensor used for this map, the Velodyne HDL-32E, yields up to 1.39 million points per second

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