Semantic mapping based on spatial concepts for grounding words related to places in daily environments

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Abstract

An autonomous robot performing tasks in a human environment needs to recognize semantic information about places. Semantic mapping is a task in which suitable semantic information is assigned to an environmental map so that a robot can communicate with people and appropriately perform tasks requested by its users. We propose a novel statistical semantic mapping method called SpCoMapping, which integrates probabilistic spatial concept acquisition based on multimodal sensor information and a Markov random field applied for learning the arbitrary shape of a place on a map. SpCoMapping can connect multiple words to a place in a semantic mapping process using user utterances without pre-setting the list of place names. We also develop a nonparametric Bayesian extension of SpCoMapping that can automatically estimate an adequate number of categories. In the experiment in the simulation environments, we showed that the proposed method generated better semantic maps than previous semantic mapping methods; our semantic maps have categories and shapes similar to the ground truth provided by the user. In addition, we showed that SpCoMapping could generate appropriate semantic maps in a real-world environment.

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APA

Katsumata, Y., Taniguchi, A., Hagiwara, Y., & Taniguchi, T. (2019). Semantic mapping based on spatial concepts for grounding words related to places in daily environments. Frontiers Robotics AI, 6(APR). https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2019.00031

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