Proceedings:
Book One
Volume
Issue:
Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 20
Track:
Robotics
Downloads:
Abstract:
QR factorization is most often used as a "black box" algorithm, but is in fact an elegant computation on a factor graph. By computing a rooted clique tree on this graph, the computation can be parallelized across subtrees, which forms the basis of so-called multifrontal QR methods. By judiciously choosing the order in which variables are eliminated in the clique tree computation, we show that one straightforwardly obtains a method for performing inference in distributed sensor networks. One obvious application is distributed localization and mapping with a team of robots. We phrase the problem as inference on a large-scale Gaussian Markov Random Field induced by the measurement factor graph, and show how multifrontal QR on this graph solves for the global map and all the robot poses in a distributed fashion. The method is illustrated using both small and large-scale simulations, and validated in practice through actual robot experiments.
AAAI
Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 20