Autonomous Search for Sparsely Distributed Visual Phenomena through Environmental Context Modeling
Eric Chen, Travis Manderson, Nare Karapetyan, Peter Edmunds, Nicholas Roy, Yogesh Girdhar

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method for autonomous underwater vehicles to efficiently locate sparsely distributed coral species by leveraging environmental context modeling and one-shot detection, significantly improving search efficiency.
Contribution
The paper presents a new approach combining one-shot detection with environmental context modeling to enhance autonomous search efficiency in sparse target scenarios.
Findings
Achieved up to 75% target sampling in half the time of exhaustive search.
Outperformed strategies relying solely on target detections.
Validated approach using real AUV-collected imagery at reef sites.
Abstract
Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) are increasingly used to survey coral reefs, yet efficiently locating specific coral species of interest remains difficult: target species are often sparsely distributed across the reef, and an AUV with limited battery life cannot afford to search everywhere. When detections of the target itself are too sparse to provide directional guidance, the robot benefits from an additional signal to decide where to look next. We propose using the visual environmental context -- the habitat features that tend to co-occur with a target species -- as that signal. Because context features are spatially denser and often vary more smoothly than target detections, we hypothesize that a reward function targeted at broader environmental context will enable adaptive planners to make better decisions on where to go next, even in regions where no target has yet been…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUnderwater Vehicles and Communication Systems · Zebrafish Biomedical Research Applications · Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
