Detecting Structural Ambiguties during a Guided Tour

Elin A. Topp*, and Henrik I. Christensen**
*)School of Computer Science and Communication, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
**)College of Computing, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
Email: topp@csc.kth.se, hic@cc.gatech.edu

Abstract

Service robots designed for domestic settings need to navigate in an environment that they have to share with their users. Thus, they have to be able to report their current state and whereabouts in a way that is comprehensible for the user. Pure metric maps do not usually correspond to the understanding of the environment a user would provide. Thus, the robotic map needs to be integrated with the human representation. With our framework for Human Augmented Mapping we aim to deal with this issue and assume a guided tour as basis for an initial mapping process. During such a tour the robotic system needs to be able to detect significant changes in its environment representation - structural ambiguities - to be able to invoke a clarification discourse with the user. In this paper we present our approach to the detection of such ambiguities, that is independent from prior specification and training of particular spatial categories. We evaluate our method on data sets obtained during several runs in indoor environments in the context of a guided tour scenario.