4.7 Article

Generic Node Removal for Factor-Graph SLAM

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ROBOTICS
Volume 30, Issue 6, Pages 1371-1385

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TRO.2014.2347571

Keywords

Factor-graphs; long-term autonomy; marginalization; mobile robotics; simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM)

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [IIS-0746455]
  2. Office of Naval Research [N00014-12-1-0092, N00014-12-1-0093]
  3. Naval Sea Systems Command through the Naval Engineering Education Center [N65540-10-C-0003]

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This paper reports on a generic factor-based method for node removal in factor-graph simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM), which we call generic linear constraints (GLCs). The need for a generic node removal tool is motivated by long-term SLAM applications, whereby nodes are removed in order to control the computational cost of graph optimization. GLC is able to produce a new set of linearized factors over the elimination clique that can represent either the true marginalization (i.e., dense GLC) or a sparse approximation of the true marginalization using a Chow-Liu tree (i.e., sparse GLC). The proposed algorithm improves upon commonly used methods in two key ways: First, it is not limited to graphs with strictly full-state relative-pose factors and works equally well with other low-rank factors, such as those produced by monocular vision. Second, the new factors are produced in such a way that accounts for measurement correlation, which is a problem encountered in other methods that rely strictly upon pairwise measurement composition. We evaluate the proposed method over multiple real-world SLAM graphs and show that it outperforms other recently proposed methods in terms of Kullback-Leibler divergence. Additionally, we experimentally demonstrate that the proposed GLC method provides a principled and flexible tool to control the computational complexity of long-term graph SLAM, with results shown for 34.9 h of real-world indoor-outdoor data covering 147.4 km collected over 27 mapping sessions spanning a period of 15 months.

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