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To address visual tracking drift caused by scale variation and occlusion, large errors of monocular ranging, and the insufficient obstacle-avoidance response in robot dynamic target following, this paper proposes a multimodal perception–based following framework. First, a KCF tracker is enhanced with a closed-loop scale-adaptive mechanism and a four-level occlusion handling scheme, so that robust target localization can still be maintained under severe appearance changes. Second, a camera-calibration–driven distance mapping function is constructed on top of the perspective projection model by introducing geometric distortion compensation, pose compensation, and a learnable bias term, which brings the monocular distance error down to the centimeter level within the 1–4 m working range. Third, LiDAR point cloud is used to build an obstacle threat model, and a semantic TEB local planner is employed to achieve coordinated target following and obstacle avoidance on a CPU-only mobile robot platform. Experiments on public long-term tracking benchmarks (LaSOT, TrackingNet, GOT-10k) and on an indoor TurtleBot3 platform show that, compared with the original KCF, the proposed method improves the LaSOT AUC from ~ 20% to 39.1% while keeping real-time performance, and, in real robot scenarios with occlusion, scale change, and dynamic obstacles, achieves a following success rate of 95.2% and a calibrated distance MAE of about 0.027 m (≈2.7%), demonstrating strong practicality and reproducibility.
Lan et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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