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Browsing by Subject "weather and illumination"
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Item All weather road edge identification based on driving video mining(IEEE, 2017) Wang, Zheyuan; Cheng, Guo; Zheng, Jiang Yu; Computer and Information Science, School of ScienceTo avoid vehicle running off road, road edge detection is a fundamental function. Current work on road edge detection has not exhaustively tackled all weather and illumination conditions. We first sort the visual appearance of roads based on physical and optical properties under various illuminations. Then, data mining approach is applied to a large driving video set that contains the full spectrum of seasons and weathers to learn the statistical distribution of road edge appearances. The obtained parameters of road environment in color on road structure are used to classify weather in video briefly, and the corresponding algorithm and features are applied for robust road edge detection. To visualize the road appearance as well as evaluate the accuracy of detected road, a compact road profile image is generated to reduce the data to a small fraction of video. Through the exhaustive examination of all weather and illuminations, our road detection methods can locate road edges in good weather, reduce errors in dark illuminations, and report road invisibility in poor illuminations.Item Big-video mining of road appearances in full spectrums of weather and illuminations(IEEE, 2017-10) Cheng, Guo; Wang, Zheyuan; Zheng, Jiang Yu; Computer and Information Science, School of ScienceAutonomous and safety driving require the control of vehicles within roads. Compared to lane mark tracking, road edge detection is more difficult because of the large variation in road and off-road materials and the influence from weather and illuminations. This work investigates visual appearances of roads under a spectrum of weather conditions. We use big-data mining on large scale naturalistic driving videos taken over a year through four seasons. Large video volumes are condensed to compact road profile images for analysis. Clusters are extracted from all samples with unsupervised learning. Typical views of a spectrum of weather/illuminations are generated from the clusters. Further, by changing the number of clusters we find a stable number for clustering. The learned data are used to classify driving videos into typical illumination types briefly. The surveyed data can also be used in the development of road edge detection algorithm and system as well as their testing.