ICRA'2005 - Workshop W-M08

Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping

Monday 18 April, 2005 (Full Day Workshop)


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Abstract

The problem of simultaneous localisation and mapping (SLAM) for an autonomous mobile robot is stated as follows: starting from a initial position, a mobile robot travels through a sequence of positions and obtains a set of sensor measurements at each position. The goal is for the mobile robot to process the sensor data to produce an estimate of its position while concurrently building a map of the environment.

During the last decade SLAM has been a significant research problem, that is now considered solved in simple 2D scenarios using laser scanners. The main open challenges include efficient mapping of large environments, modelling complex and dynamic environments, multi-vehicle SLAM and full 3D SLAM. Most of this challenges will require scalable representations, robust data association algorithms, consistent estimation techniques, and different sensor modalities. In particular, solving SLAM with monocular or stereo vision is a crucial research goal for addressing many real life applications.

The objectives of this workshop are to present recent advances on these key issues, discuss and compare different approaches and assess the current state-of-the-art in SLAM. The workshop will also cover a wide variety of classical and emerging SLAM applications such as field and service robots, off-road driving, mining, underwater, airborne, humanoids  and augmented reality.

Organizer

Juan Domingo Tardós
Universidad de Zaragoza
Maria de Luna 3, Edificio Ada Byron
50018 Zaragoza, SPAIN
phone: +34 976 76 21 04  -  fax: +34 976 76 19 14
email: tardos “at” unizar.es

Preliminary Program 

  Time 
Presentations
 9:00-9:05 Welcome
Juan Domingo Tardós, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain
 9:05-9:30 Delayed vs Undelayed Landmark Initialization for Bearing Only SLAM
Joan Solà i Ortega, LAAS, Toulouse,France
 9:30-10:00 Robust SLAM
Henrik I. Christensen, KTH, Stockholm, Sweden
10:00-10:30 Efficient Generation of Dense Maps with Rao-Blackwellized Particle Filters
Wolfram Burgard, University of Freiburg, Germany
10:30-11:00 Scan-SLAM: Combining EKF-SLAM and Scan Correlation
Eduardo Nebot, University of Sydney, Australia
11:00-11:30 Coffe Break
11:30-12:00 Multivehicle Mapping of Large Environments
José Neira, University of Zaragoza, Spain
12:00-12:30 Information and Observability Metrics of Inertial SLAM for On-line Path-planning on an Aerial Vehicle
Salah Sukkarieh, University of Sydney, Australia
 
12:30-13:00 Efficient Simultaneous Localization and Mapping Algorithms using Submap Networks
John J. Leonard, MIT, USA
13:00-14:30 Lunch
14:30-15:00 Mapping for high-speed off-road driving
Hendrik Dahlkamp, Sebastian Thrun, Stanford University, USA
15:00-15:30 Large-Area Visually Augmented Navigation in an Unstructured Underwater Environment
Ryan Eustice, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, USA
15:30-16:00 Using Naturally Salient Regions for SLAM with 3D Laser Data
Paul M. Newman, University of Oxford, UK
16:00-16:30 Coffe Break
16:30-17:00 Vision-Based SLAM for a Humanoid Robot
Andrew Davison, University of Oxford, UK
17:00-18:00 Panel Discussion: Open Issues


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Last modified: March 30, 2005