English

Sketched Floor plans versus SLAM maps: A Comparison

Human-Computer Interaction 2016-06-16 v1

Abstract

Maps --- specifically floor plans --- are useful for a variety of tasks from arranging furniture to designating conceptual or functional spaces (e.g., kitchen, walkway). We present a simple algorithm for quickly laying a floor plan (or other conceptual map) onto a SLAM map, creating a one-to-one mapping between them. Our goal was to enable using a floor plan (or other hand-drawn or annotated map) in robotic applications instead of the typical SLAM map created by the robot. We look at two use cases, specifying "no-go" regions within a room and locating objects within a scanned room. Although a user study showed no statistical difference between the two types of maps in terms of performance on this spatial memory task, we argue that floor plans are closer to the mental maps people would naturally draw to characterize spaces.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1606.04836,
  title  = {Sketched Floor plans versus SLAM maps: A Comparison},
  author = {Leo Bowen-Biggs and Suzanne Dazo and Yili Zhang and Alex Hubers and Matthew Rueben and Ross Sowell and William D. Smart and Cindy Grimm},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1606.04836},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

11 pages singe column, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T14:26:06.766Z