A furcated visual collision avoidance system for an autonomous micro robot

Date

2018-07-23

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

IEEE

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

2379-8920

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Isakhani H, Aouf N, Kechagias-Stamatis O, Whidborne J. (2020) A furcated visual collision avoidance system for an autonomous micro robot. IEEE Transactions on Cognitive and Developmental Systems, Volume 12, March 2020, pp. 1-11

Abstract

This paper proposes a secondary reactive collision avoidance system for micro class of robots based on a novel approach known as the Furcated Luminance-Difference Processing (FLDP) inspired by the Lobula Giant Movement Detector, a wide-field visual neuron located in the lobula layer of a locust nervous system. This paper addresses some of the major collision avoidance challenges; obstacle proximity & direction estimation, and operation in GPS-denied environment with irregular lighting. Additionally, it has proven effective in detecting edges independent of background color, size, and contour. The FLDP executes a series of image enhancement and edge detection algorithms to estimate collision threat-level which further determines whether or not the robot’s field of view must be dissected where each section’s response is compared against the others to generate a simple collision-free maneuver. Ultimately, the computation load and the performance of the model is assessed against an eclectic set of off-line as well as real-time real-world collision scenarios validating the proposed model’s asserted capability to avoid obstacles at more than 670 mm prior to collision, moving at 1.2 ms¯¹ with a successful avoidance rate of 90% processing at 120 Hz on a simple single core microcontroller, sufficient to conclude the system’s feasibility for real-time real-world applications that possess fail-safe collision avoidance system.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Autonomous robots, biologically-inspired, furcated luminance-difference processing (FLDP), direction and proximity estimation

DOI

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

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