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Publications

Publications by Aníbal Matos

2019

A mosaicking technique for object identification in underwater environments

Authors
Nunes, AP; Silva Gaspar, ARS; Pinto, AM; Matos, AC;

Publication
SENSOR REVIEW

Abstract
Purpose This paper aims to present a mosaicking method for underwater robotic applications, whose result can be provided to other perceptual systems for scene understanding such as real-time object recognition. Design/methodology/approach This method is called robust and large-scale mosaicking (ROLAMOS) and presents an efficient frame-to-frame motion estimation with outlier removal and consistency checking that maps large visual areas in high resolution. The visual mosaic of the sea-floor is created on-the-fly by a robust registration procedure that composes monocular observations and manages the computational resources. Moreover, the registration process of ROLAMOS aligns the observation to the existing mosaic. Findings A comprehensive set of experiments compares the performance of ROLAMOS to other similar approaches, using both data sets (publicly available) and live data obtained by a ROV operating in real scenes. The results demonstrate that ROLAMOS is adequate for mapping of sea-floor scenarios as it provides accurate information from the seabed, which is of extreme importance for autonomous robots surveying the environment that does not rely on specialized computers. Originality/value The ROLAMOS is suitable for robotic applications that require an online, robust and effective technique to reconstruct the underwater environment from only visual information.

2019

An Hierarchical Architecture for Docking Autonomous Surface Vehicles

Authors
Leite, P; Silva, R; Matos, A; Pinto, AM;

Publication
2019 19TH IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON AUTONOMOUS ROBOT SYSTEMS AND COMPETITIONS (ICARSC 2019)

Abstract
Autonomous Surface Vehicles (ASVs) provide the ideal platform to further explore the many opportunities in the cargo shipping industry, by making it more profitable and safer. This paper presents an architecture for the autonomous docking operation, formed by two stages: a maneuver module and, a situational awareness system to detect a mooring facility where an ASV can safely dock. Information retrieved from a 3D LIDAR, IMU and GPS are combined to extract the geometric features of the floating platform and to estimate the relative positioning and orientation of the moor to the ASV. Then, the maneuver module plans a trajectory to a specific position and guarantees that the ASV will not collide with the mooring facility. The approach presented in this paper was validated in distinct environmental and weather conditions such as tidal waves and wind. The results demonstrate the ability of the proposed architecture for detecting the docking platform and safely conduct the navigation towards it, achieving errors up to 0.107 m in position and 6.58 degrees in orientation.

2019

REX 16-Robotic Exercises 2016 Multi-robot field trials

Authors
Marques, MM; Mendonca, R; Marques, F; Ramalho, T; Lobo, V; Matos, A; Ferreira, B; Simoes, N; Castelao, I;

Publication
2019 IEEE UNDERWATER TECHNOLOGY (UT)

Abstract
Nowadays, one of the problems associated with Unmanned Systems is the gap between research community and end-users. In order to emend this problem, the Portuguese Navy Research Center (CINAV) conducts the REX 2016 (Robotic Exercises). This paper describes the trials that were presented in this exercise, divided in two phases. The first phase happened at the Naval Base in Lisbon, with the support of divers and RHIBs (Rigid-Hulled Inflatable Boats), and the second phase, also with divers' support, at the coast of Lisbon-Cascais. It counted with many participants and research groups, including INESC-TEC, UNINOVA, TEKEVER and UAVISION. There are several advantages of doing this exercise, including for the Portuguese Navy, but also for partners. For the Navy, because it is an opportunity of being in contact with recent market technologies and researches. On the other hand, it is an opportunity for the partners to test their systems in a real environment, which usually is a difficult action to accomplish. Therefore, the paper describes three of the most relevant experiments: underwater docking stations, UAV and USV cooperation and Tracking targets from UAVs.

2019

Deep Learning Approaches Assessment for Underwater Scene Understanding and Egomotion Estimation

Authors
Teixeira, B; Silva, H; Matos, A; Silva, E;

Publication
OCEANS 2019 MTS/IEEE SEATTLE

Abstract
This paper address the use of deep learning approaches for visual based navigation in confined underwater environments. State-of-the-art algorithms have shown the tremendous potential deep learning architectures can have for visual navigation implementations, though they are still mostly outperformed by classical feature-based techniques. In this work, we apply current state-of-the-art deep learning methods for visual-based robot navigation to the more challenging underwater environment, providing both an underwater visual dataset acquired in real operational mission scenarios and an assessment of state-of-the-art algorithms on the underwater context. We extend current work by proposing a novel pose optimization architecture for the purpose of correcting visual odometry estimate drift using a Visual-Inertial fusion network, consisted of a neural network architecture anchored on an Inertial supervision learning scheme. Our Visual-Inertial Fusion Network was shown to improve results an average of 50% for trajectory estimates, also producing more visually consistent trajectory estimates for both our underwater application scenarios.

2019

Three-dimensional mapping in underwater environment

Authors
Nunes, A; Matos, A;

Publication
U.Porto Journal of Engineering

Abstract
Autonomous underwater vehicles are applied in diverse fields, namely in tasks that are risky for human beings to perform, as optical inspection for the purpose of structures quality control. Optical sensors are more appealing cost and they supply a larger quantity of data. Lasers can be used to reconstruct structures in three dimensions, along with cameras, which create a faithful representation of the environment. However, in this context a visual approach was used and the paper presents a method that can put together the three-dimensional information that has been harvested over time, combining also RGB information for surface reconstruction. The map construction follows the motion estimated by a odometry method previously selected from the literature. Experiments conducted using real scenario show that the proposed solution is able to provide a reliable map for objects and even the seafloor.

2019

Simultaneous underwater navigation and mapping

Authors
Gaspar, ARS; Matos, A;

Publication
U.Porto Journal of Engineering

Abstract
The use of underwater autonomous vehicles has been growing, allowing the performance of tasks that cause inherent risks to Human, namely in inspection processes near to structures. With growth in usage of systems with autonomous navigation, visual acquisition methods have also gotten more developed because, they have appealing cost and they also show interesting results when operate at a short distance. It is possible to improve the quality of navigation through visual SLAM techniques which can map and locate simultaneously and its key aspect is the detection of revisited areas. These techniques are not usually applied to underwater scenarios and, therefore, its performance in environment is unknown. The paper presents a more reliable navigation system for underwater vehicles, resorting to some visual SLAM techniques from literature. The results, conducted in a realistic scenario, demonstrated the ability of the system to be applied to underwater environment.

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