In what could one day help find missing people in forests, a team of researchers used deep learning to train an autonomous drone to navigate a previously-unseen trail in a densely wooded forest completely on its own.
The researchers from Dalle Molle Institute for Artificial Intelligence, the University of Zurich, and NCCR Robotics, mounted three GoPro cameras to a headset to train their deep neural network and took over 20,000 pictures from hours of trail hikes in the Swiss Alps. These images were then used alongside an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 580 GPU to teach the model what the boundaries of a hiking trail generally look like.
Check out the autonomous drone in action in the video below.
The researchers claim the resulting deep learning network is even better than humans at determining the correct direction of the trails on which it travels, guessing the correct direction of a trail with 85 percent accuracy. Humans tasked with determining the direction of the same trails were able to do so correctly only 82 percent of the time.
Read more >>
Autonomous Search-and-Rescue Drones Outperform Humans at Navigating Forest Trails
Feb 11, 2016
Discuss (0)
AI-Generated Summary
- Researchers from the Dalle Molle Institute for Artificial Intelligence, the University of Zurich, and NCCR Robotics trained an autonomous drone to navigate a previously unseen trail in a densely wooded forest using deep learning.
- The team used over 20,000 images from GoPro cameras mounted on a headset, taken during hours of trail hikes in the Swiss Alps, to train their deep neural network on an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 580 GPU.
- The resulting deep learning network was able to guess the correct direction of a trail with 85 percent accuracy, outperforming humans who were correct only 82 percent of the time.
AI-generated content may summarize information incompletely. Verify important information. Learn more