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Landmark Detection & Robot Tracking (SLAM)

Project Overview

In this project, you'll implement SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) for a 2 dimensional world! You’ll combine what you know about robot sensor measurements and movement to create a map of an environment from only sensor and motion data gathered by a robot, over time. SLAM gives you a way to track the location of a robot in the world in real-time and identify the locations of landmarks such as buildings, trees, rocks, and other world features. This is an active area of research in the fields of robotics and autonomous systems.

Below is an example of a 2D robot world with landmarks (purple x's) and the robot (a red 'o') located and found using only sensor and motion data collected by that robot. This is just one example for a 50x50 grid world; in your work you will likely generate a variety of these maps.

The project will be broken up into three Python notebooks; the first two are for exploration of provided code, and a review of SLAM architectures, only Notebook 3 and the robot_class.py file will be graded:

Notebook 1 : Robot Moving and Sensing

Notebook 2 : Omega and Xi, Constraints

Notebook 3 : Landmark Detection and Tracking

Project Instructions

All of the starting code and resources you'll need to compete this project are in this Github repository. Before you can get started coding, you'll have to make sure that you have all the libraries and dependencies required to support this project. If you have already created a cv-nd environment for exercise code, then you can use that environment! If not, instructions for creation and activation are below.

Local Environment Instructions

  1. Clone the repository, and navigate to the downloaded folder.
git clone https://github.com/udacity/P3_Implement_SLAM.git
cd P3_Implement_SLAM
  1. Create (and activate) a new environment, named cv-nd with Python 3.6. If prompted to proceed with the install (Proceed [y]/n) type y.

    • Linux or Mac:
    conda create -n cv-nd python=3.6
    source activate cv-nd
    
    • Windows:
    conda create --name cv-nd python=3.6
    activate cv-nd
    

    At this point your command line should look something like: (cv-nd) <User>:P3_Implement_SLAM <user>$. The (cv-nd) indicates that your environment has been activated, and you can proceed with further package installations.

  2. Install a few required pip packages, which are specified in the requirements text file (including OpenCV).

pip install -r requirements.txt

Notebooks

  1. Navigate back to the repo. (Also, your source environment should still be activated at this point.)
cd
cd P3_Implement_SLAM
  1. Open the directory of notebooks, using the below command. You'll see all of the project files appear in your local environment; open the first notebook and follow the instructions.
jupyter notebook
  1. Once you open any of the project notebooks, make sure you are in the correct cv-nd environment by clicking Kernel > Change Kernel > cv-nd.

NOTE: While some code has already been implemented to get you started, you will need to implement additional functionality and answer all of the questions included in the notebook. Unless requested, it's suggested that you do not modify code that has already been included.

Evaluation

Your project will be reviewed against the project rubric. Review this rubric thoroughly, and self-evaluate your project before submission. All criteria found in the rubric must meet specifications for you to pass.

Project Submission

When you are ready to submit your project, collect all of your project files -- all executed notebooks, and python files -- and compress them into a single zip archive for upload.

Alternatively, your submission could consist of only the GitHub link to your repository with all of the completed files.

Project Rubric

robot_class.py: Implementation of sense

Implement the sense function

Criteria Meets Specifications
Implement the sense function for the robot class. Implement the sense function to complete the robot class found in the robot_class.py file. This implementation should account for a given amount of measurement_noise and the measurement_range of the robot. This function should return a list of values that reflect the measured distance (dx, dy) between the robot's position and any landmarks it sees. One item in the list has the format: [landmark_index, dx, dy].

Notebook 3: Implementation of initialize_constraints

Initialize omega and xi matrices

Criteria Meets Specifications
Initialize constraint matrices. Initialize the array omega and vector xi such that any unknown values are 0 the size of these should vary with the given world_size, num_landmarks, and time step, N, parameters.

Notebook 3: Implementation of slam

Update the constraint matrices as you read sensor measurements

Criteria Meets Specifications
Iterate through the generated data and update the constraints. The values in the constraint matrices should be affected by sensor measurements and these updates should account for uncertainty in sensing.

Update the constraint matrices as you read robot motion data

Criteria Meets Specifications
Iterate through the generated data and update the constraints. The values in the constraint matrices should be affected by motion (dx, dy) and these updates should account for uncertainty in motion.

slam returns a list of robot and landmark positions, mu

Criteria Meets Specifications
The result of slam should be a list of robot and landmark positions, mu. The values in mu will be the x, y positions of the robot over time and the estimated locations of landmarks in the world. mu is calculated with the constraint matrices omega^(-1)*xi.

Answer question about final pose

Criteria Meets Specifications
Answer question about the final robot pose. Compare the slam-estimated and true final pose of the robot; answer why these values might be different.

slam passes all tests

Criteria Meets Specifications
Test your implementation of slam. There are two provided test_data cases, test your implementation of slam on them and see if the result matches.

LICENSE: This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.

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