UNav: An Infrastructure-Independent Vision-Based Navigation System for People with Blindness and Low vision
Anbang Yang, Mahya Beheshti, Todd E Hudson, Rajesh Vedanthan, Wachara, Riewpaiboon, Pattanasak Mongkolwat, Chen Feng, John-Ross Rizzo

TL;DR
This paper introduces UNav, a vision-based navigation system for visually impaired users that does not require pre-installed infrastructure, using image recognition and mapping techniques to achieve accurate localization and routing.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel infrastructure-independent navigation pipeline leveraging visual place recognition and 3D mapping for visually impaired assistance.
Findings
Achieves less than 1 meter localization error on average.
Operates without prior knowledge of camera intrinsic parameters.
Successfully tested in a complex hospital environment.
Abstract
Vision-based localization approaches now underpin newly emerging navigation pipelines for myriad use cases from robotics to assistive technologies. Compared to sensor-based solutions, vision-based localization does not require pre-installed sensor infrastructure, which is costly, time-consuming, and/or often infeasible at scale. Herein, we propose a novel vision-based localization pipeline for a specific use case: navigation support for end-users with blindness and low vision. Given a query image taken by an end-user on a mobile application, the pipeline leverages a visual place recognition (VPR) algorithm to find similar images in a reference image database of the target space. The geolocations of these similar images are utilized in downstream tasks that employ a weighted-average method to estimate the end-user's location and a perspective-n-point (PnP) algorithm to estimate the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRobotics and Sensor-Based Localization · Indoor and Outdoor Localization Technologies · Advanced Image and Video Retrieval Techniques
