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Publications

Publications by Paulo José Costa

2013

A set of novel modifications to improve algorithms from the A* family applied in mobile robotics

Authors
do Nascimento, TP; Costa, P; Costa, PG; Moreira, AP; Scolari Conceição, AG;

Publication
J. Braz. Comput. Soc.

Abstract
This paper presents a set of novel modifications that can be applied to any grid-based path planning algorithm from the A* family used in mobile robotics. Five modifications are presented regarding the way the robot sees an obstacle and its target to plan the robot's path. The modifications make it possible for the robot to get to the target faster than traditional algorithms, as well as to avoid obstacles that move as fast as (or even faster than) the robot. Some simulations were made using a crowded and highly dynamic environment with twelve randomly moving obstacles. In these first simulations, a middle sized 5DPO robot was used. Also, real experiments were made with a small-sized version of a 5DPO robot to validate the algorithm's effectiveness. In all simulations and real robot experiments the objects are considered to be moving at a constant speed. Finally, we present an overall discussion and conclusion of this paper. © 2012 The Brazilian Computer Society.

2013

Real-time tracking system for a moored oil tanker: A Kalman filter approach

Authors
Malheiros, P; Rosa Santos, P; Gonçalves, J; Costa, P; Paulo Moreira, A; Veloso Gomes, F; Taveira Pinto, F;

Publication
Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering

Abstract
This paper presents a tracking system developed to study the behavior of an oil tanker moored at the Berth ‘‘A’’ of the Leixões Oil Terminal, Porto, Portugal. A brief description of the local environmental conditions and the existing operational conditions at that oil terminal are presented. Due to extreme outdoor working conditions a Kalman filter was implemented to ensure the robustness and reliability of the obtained measurements. Tests were performed in laboratory on a physical model of a moored oil tanker at a scale 1/100. The results were compared with a commercial motion capture system installed in laboratory. The presented measurement system was developed as part of the DOLPHIN project that aims to study the behavior of moored ships in harbors. © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2013.

2017

Visual motion perception for mobile robots through dense optical flow fields

Authors
Pinto, AM; Costa, PG; Correia, MV; Matos, AC; Moreira, AP;

Publication
ROBOTICS AND AUTONOMOUS SYSTEMS

Abstract
Recent advances in visual motion detection and interpretation have made possible the rising of new robotic systems for autonomous and active surveillance. In this line of research, the current work discusses motion perception by proposing a novel technique that analyzes dense flow fields and distinguishes several regions with distinct motion models. The method is called Wise Optical Flow Clustering (WOFC) and extracts the moving objects by performing two consecutive operations: evaluating and resetting. Motion properties of the flow field are retrieved and described in the evaluation phase, which provides high level information about the spatial segmentation of the flow field. During the resetting operation, these properties are combined and used to feed a guided segmentation approach. The WOFC requires information about the number of motion models and, therefore, this paper introduces a model selection method based on a Bayesian approach that balances the model's fitness and complexity. It combines the correlation of a histogram-based analysis with the decay ratio of the normalized entropy criterion. This approach interprets the flow field and gives an estimative about the number of moving objects. The experiments conducted in a realistic environment have proved that the WOFC presents several advantages that meet the requirements of common robotic and surveillance applications: is computationally efficient and provides a pixel-wise segmentation, comparatively to other state-of-the-art methods.

2015

Visual Signature for Place Recognition in Indoor Scenarios

Authors
dos Santos, FN; Costa, PC; Moreira, AP;

Publication
CONTROLO'2014 - PROCEEDINGS OF THE 11TH PORTUGUESE CONFERENCE ON AUTOMATIC CONTROL

Abstract
Recognizing a place with a visual glance is the first capacity used by humans to understand where they are. Making this capacity available to robots will make it possible to increase the redundancy of the localization systems available in the robots, and improve semantic localization systems. However, to achieve this capacity it is necessary to build a robust visual signature that could be used by a classifier. This paper presents a new approach to extract a global descriptor from an image that can be used as the visual signature for indoor scenarios. This global descriptor was tested using videos acquired from three robots in three different indoor scenarios. This descriptor has shown good accuracy and computational performance when compared to other local and global descriptors.

2016

WirelessSyncroVision: Wireless synchronization for industrial stereoscopic systems

Authors
Pinto, AM; Moreira, AP; Costa, PG;

Publication
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY

Abstract
The research proposes a novel technological solution for marker-based human motion capture called WirelessSyncroVision (WSV). The WSV is formed by two main modules: the visual node (WSV-V) which is based on a stereoscopic vision system and the marker node (WSV-M) that is constituted by a 6-DOF active marker. The solution synchronizes the acquisition of images in remote muti-cameras with the ON period of the active marker. This increases the robustness of the stereoscopic system to illumination changes, which is extremely relevant for programming industrial robotic-arms using a human demonstrator programming by demonstration (PbD). In addition, the research presents a robust method named Adaptive and Robust Synchronization (ARS), that is designed for temporal alignment of remote devices using a wireless network. The algorithm models the phase difference as a function of time, measuring the parameters that must be known to predict the synchronization instant between the active marker and the remote cameras. Results demonstrate that the ARS creates a balance between the real-time capability and the performance estimation of the phase difference. Therefore, this research proposes an elegant solution to synchronize image acquisition systems in real-time that is easy to implement with low operational costs; however, the major advantage of the WSV is related to its high level of flexibility since it can be extended toward to other devices besides the PbD, for instance, motion capture, motion analysis, and remote sensoring systems.

2017

Robot Localization System in a Hard Outdoor Environment

Authors
Conceição, T; dos Santos, FN; Costa, PG; Moreira, AP;

Publication
ROBOT 2017: Third Iberian Robotics Conference - Volume 1, Seville, Spain, November 22-24, 2017

Abstract
Localization and mapping of autonomous robots in a hard and unstable environment (Steep Slope Vineyards) is a challenging research topic. Typically, the commonly used dead reckoning systems can fail due to the harsh conditions of the terrain and the Global Position System (GPS) accuracy can be considerably noisy or not always available. One solution is to use wireless sensors in a network as landmarks. This paper evaluates a ultra-wideband time-of-flight based technology (Pozyx), which can be used as cost-effective solution for application in agricultural robots that works in harsh environment. Moreover, this paper implements a Localization Extended Kalman Filter (EKF) that fuses odometry with the Pozyx Range measurements to increase the default Pozyx Algorithm accuracy. © Springer International Publishing AG 2018.

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