We presented two demonstrations for the open day at INRIA for the European Robotics Week:
For more info please have a look at the following links:
The european robotics coordination action.
Several releases have been made in the press following this day:
http://pro.01net.com/editorial/547722/eu-robotics-week-la-kinect-de-microsoft-devient-un-outil-de-vision-pour-les-robots/
http://pro.01net.com/editorial/547710/eu-robotics-week-le-vehicule-automatique-cycab/
Article from Nice-Matin:
I was invited to do a talk at LDRMC 2011. Our presentation is available here: comport_LDRMC_talk.pdf
This was the First International Workshop on Live Dense Reconstruction from Moving Cameras in conjunction with the ICCV 2011, November 12, Barcelona, Spain.
http://www.doc.ic.ac.uk/livedensereconstruction/
The workshop was highly successful and brought together researchers in robotics and vision to synthesise state-of-the-art theory and practice in live dense reconstruction from moving cameras including passive and active RGB-D devices.
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW CLOSED
Real-time dense localisation and mapping
for autonomous traversal of un-even ground
The computer vision and robotics group at the CNRS-I3S, Sophia-Antipolis, France is seeking an outstanding Postdoctoral candidate.
The position is under the supervision of Dr. Andrew Comport and and is associated with a project developing new techniques in real-time Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping (SLAM) using RGB-D sensors. The principal objective of this project will be to develop a localisation module which produces a 6D (position and orientation) position of a camera during the displacement of a mobile robot. This localisation will allow a control module to traverse un-even terrain and obstacles in an autonomous manner. The localisation will be carried out by estimating the motion of the platform using both photometric texture information and geometric measurements of the immediate environment around the robot. A fusion step is also to be considered which will integrate data from an embedded inertial sensor. Another objective of this project will be to develop a module which produces a 3D representaiton of the environement. This model will be augmented with information that is necessary for generating the movement of the robot like, for example, accesible zones in the environment for the robot or the geometric simplification of the scene using planar regions. Both the localisation and mapping phases will be integrated into a coupled real-time process.
This project aims to apply these techniques to the Caméléon mobile robot (see above image) designed by ECA. This will involve working closely with their platform and using compatible open source software such as ROS and OpenCV.
The candidate for the Postdoc position is expected to have a PhD degree in computer vision or visual servoing. Strong programming skills in C, C++, MATLAB or equivalent are required. Applicants demonstrating excellence in other related areas are encouraged to apply. International applications are encouraged. The salary is 2300-2500 Euro/month gross and will be indexed with inflation. The three year project is due to begin early in 2012.
If you are interested in this position please contact :
Dr. Andrew Comport - comport@i3s.unice.fr
and join a CV including at least two referees and a motivation letter.
Some related references include:
[1] Comport, A. I., Malis, E. & Rives, P (2007). Accurate Quadri-focal Tracking for Robust 3D Visual Odometry. In IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, ICRA'07. Rome, Italy.
[2] Tykkälä, T. M. & Comport, A. I (2011). Direct Iterative Closest Point for Real-time Visual Odometry. In The Second international Workshop on Computer Vision in Vehicle Technology: From Earth to Mars in conjunction with the International Conference on Computer Vision. Barcelona, Spain.
[3] Meilland, M., Comport, A. I. & Rives, P (2011). Dense visual mapping of large scale environments for real-time localisation. In IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems. San Francisco, California.
[4] Kurt Konolige, Motilal Agrawal: FrameSLAM: From Bundle Adjustment to Real-Time Visual Mapping. IEEE Transactions on Robotics 24(5): 1066-1077 (2008)
[5] Meilland, M., Comport, A. I. & Rives, P (2010). A Spherical Robot-Centered Representation for Urban Navigation. In IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems, IROS'10. Taipei, Taiwan.
[6] Richard A. Newcombe and Andrew J. Davison. Live Dense Reconstruction with a Single Moving Camera. IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR 2010)
Title: Life Long Navigation and Map Learning
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW CLOSED
The computer vision and robotics group at Sophia-Antipolis, France is seeking an outstanding PhD candidate for a CNRS funded scholarship. The position will begin in October 2011. The position is under the supervision of Dr. Patrick Rives and Dr. Andrew Comport. This project will focus on life long navigation and map learning using vision sensors in collaboration with Astrium.
Title: Life Long Navigation and Map Learning
Subject: The objective of this PhD is to investigate the general problem of visual mapping of complex 3D environments that evolve over time. This requires explicitly taking into account the variability of viewing conditions and content within a 3D geometric and photometric model of the environment. A central objective will be to investigate how to efficiently and accurately represent this model. The aim is to build models that remain usable over long periods of time for navigation tasks (localisation and path following) for autonomous systems or for people that require guidance. This research problem, which is already active in the vision community, has only just begun to be investigated by the robotics community via the new perspective of incremental SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping).
Now that the problem of modelling large-scale environments is well understood, the next major technical challenge on the horizon is the problem of being able to maintain a valid environment representation over a long period of time. This problem is referred to as Life-Long Learning. This topic is in continuity with the research carried out conjointly between P.Rives from the Arobas team at INRIA Sophia-Méditerrané and A.Comport from CNRS-I3S UNSA. The existing approach relies on a ego centered representation that combines a spherical image and a depth map (augmented visual sphere). This representation synthesises information collected in an local area of space by an embedded acquisition system. The representation of the global environment consists of a collection of augmented visual spheres that provide the necessary coverage of an operational area and each sphere is precisely geo-referenced globally. A "pose" graph that links these spheres together, in six degrees of freedom, also defines the domain which is reachable by an autonomous agent and that is potentially exploitable for navigation tasks in real time. As part of this research, it is proposed to develop an approach to Life-long learning map-based representation by considering the following issues:
The implementation of the work will be integrated, tested and validated on robotic platforms available at INRIA Sophia-Antipolis and partner laboratories.
Requirements : For this position, candidates must be enrolled in a Masters stream with a focus on computer vision, visual servoing, and/or automatic control. The candidate should have also good abilities for software development and report writing.
Contacts : Send a CV and a motivation letter to Patrick.Rives@inria.fr or comport@i3s.unice.fr
Location :
Projet ARobAS INRIA,
Centre Sophia-Antipolis Méditerranée
2004 Route des Lucioles
06902 SOPHIA-ANTIPOLIS Cedex
A detailed description of this position can be found in French here :
http://www.i3s.unice.fr/~comport/outgoing/sujet_these/Sujet-Astrium-2011.pdf

I will be attending the IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS 2010).
| Invited Talk |
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Invited to present the quadrifocal visual odometry approach at CVPR workshop on Visual Localisation for Mobile Platforms (VLMP) organised by Motilal Agrawal and Kurt Konolige.
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 03 August 2011 08:44 |