Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (60) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- no (60) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (60)
Analyse dynamischer Szenen
(1999)
In diesem Artikel wird die Analyse dynamischer Szenen im Rahmen einer flexiblen Architektur zur Lösung von Fahrerassistenzaufgaben in Kraftfahrzeugen vorgestellt. Die Lösung unterschiedlicher Aufgaben mit verwandten Ansätzen bedingt einen hohen Grad an Modularität und Flexibilität. Nur so können die gestellten Aufgaben mit den vorhandenen Algorithmen optimal gelöst werden. In der vorgestellten Architektur wird eine objektbezogene Analyse von Sensordaten, eine verhaltensbasierte Szeneninterpretation und eine Verhaltensplanung durchgeführt. Eine globale Wissensbasis, auf der jedes einzelne Modul arbeitet, beinhaltet die Beschreibung physikalischer Zusammenhänge, Verhaltensregeln für den Straßenverkehr, sowie Objekt- und Szenenwissen.
Externes Wissen (z.B. GPS – Global Positioning System) kann ebenfalls in die Wissensbasis eingebunden werden. Als Anwendungsbeispiel der Verhaltensplanung ist ein intelligenter Tempomat realisiert.
Systems for automated image analysis are useful for a variety of tasks and their importance is still increasing due to technological advances and an increase of social acceptance. Especially in the field of driver assistance systems the progress in science has reached a level of high performance. Fully or partly autonomously guided vehicles, particularly for road-based traffic, pose high demands on the development of reliable algorithms due to the conditions imposed by natural environments. At the Institut fur Neuroinformatik, methods for analyzing driving relevant scenes by computer vision are developed in cooperation with several partners from the automobile industry. We introduce a system which extracts the important information from an image taken by a CCD camera installed at the rear view mirror in a car. The approach consists of a sequential and a parallel sensor and information processing. Three main tasks namely the initial segmentation (object detection), the object tracking and the object classification are realized by integration in the sequential branch and by fusion in the parallel branch. The main gain of this approach is given by the integrative coupling of different algorithms providing partly redundant information.
Analysis of dynamic scenes
(2000)
In this paper the proposed architecture for a dynamic scene analysis is illustrated by a driver assistance system. To reduce the number of traffic accidents and to increase the drivers comfort, the thought of designing driver assistance systems rose in the past years. Principal problems are caused by having a moving observer (ego motion) in predominantly natural surroundings. In this paper we present a solution for a flexible architecture for a driver assistance system. The architecture can be subdivided into four different parts: the object-related analysis, the knowledge base, the behavior-based scene interpretation, and the behavior planning unit. The object-related analysis is fed with data by the sensors (vision, radar). The sensor data are preprocessed (flexible sensor fusion) and evaluated (saliency map) searching for object-related information (positions, types of objects, etc.). The knowledge base is represented by static and dynamic knowledge. It consists of a set of rules (traffic rules, physical laws), additional information (GPS, lane-information) and it is implicitly used by algorithms in the system. The scene interpretation combines the information extracted by the
object-related analysis and inspects the information for contradictions. It is strongly connected to the behavior planning using only information needed for the actual task. In the scene interpretation consistent representations (i.e., bird’s eye view) are organized and interpreted as well as a scene analysis is performed. The results of the scene interpretation are used for decision making in behavior planning, which is controlled by the actual task.
Handgesten im Automobil haben das Potenzial einer Kombination von gut sichtbaren Displays nahe der Windschutzscheibe und einer als intuitiv empfundenen Gestensteuerung, wie sie berührungsgesteuert von Smartphones aber auch berührungslos von einigen Fernsehgeräten bekannt ist. Bei entsprechender Positionierung der Sensoren können so die Augen auf der Straße und die Hände am Lenkrad oder zumindest sehr nahe dazu verbleiben. Der hier beschriebene frühe Demonstrator zeigt die Machbarkeit dieser Technologie mit einem neuartigen Erkennungsverfahren.
We present a novel approach of distributing matrix multiplications among GPU-equipped nodes in a cluster system. In this context we discuss the induced challenges and possible solutions. Additionally we state an algorithm which outperforms optimized GPU BLAS libraries for small matrices. Furthermore we provide a novel theoretical model for distributing algorithms within homogeneous computation systems with multiple hierarchies. In the context of this model we develop an algorithm which can find the optimal distribution parameters for each involved subalgorithm. We provide a detailed analysis of the algorithms space and time complexities and justify its use with a structured evaluation within a small GPU-equipped Beowulf cluster.
We present a novel method to perform multi-class pattern classification with neural networks and test it on a challenging 3D hand gesture recognition problem. Our method consists of a standard one-against-all (OAA) classification, followed by another network layer classifying the resulting class scores, possibly augmented by the original raw input vector. This allows the network to disambiguate hard-to-separate classes as the distribution of class scores carries considerable information as well, and is in fact often used for assessing the confidence of a decision. We show that by this approach we are able to significantly boost our results, overall as well as for particular difficult cases, on the hard 10-class gesture classification task.