Author:
Vintr Tomáš,Blaha Jan,Rektoris Martin,Ulrich Jiří,Rouček Tomáš,Broughton George,Yan Zhi,Krajník Tomáš
Abstract
Despite the advances in mobile robotics, the introduction of autonomous robots in human-populated environments is rather slow. One of the fundamental reasons is the acceptance of robots by people directly affected by a robot’s presence. Understanding human behavior and dynamics is essential for planning when and how robots should traverse busy environments without disrupting people’s natural motion and causing irritation. Research has exploited various techniques to build spatio-temporal representations of people’s presence and flows and compared their applicability to plan optimal paths in the future. Many comparisons of how dynamic map-building techniques show how one method compares on a dataset versus another, but without consistent datasets and high-quality comparison metrics, it is difficult to assess how these various methods compare as a whole and in specific tasks. This article proposes a methodology for creating high-quality criteria with interpretable results for comparing long-term spatio-temporal representations for human-aware path planning and human-aware navigation scheduling. Two criteria derived from the methodology are then applied to compare the representations built by the techniques found in the literature. The approaches are compared on a real-world, long-term dataset, and the conception is validated in a field experiment on a robotic platform deployed in a human-populated environment. Our results indicate that continuous spatio-temporal methods independently modeling spatial and temporal phenomena outperformed other modeling approaches. Our results provide a baseline for future work to compare a wide range of methods employed for long-term navigation and provide researchers with an understanding of how these various methods compare in various scenarios.
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,Computer Science Applications
Cited by
3 articles.
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