Publication
Leveraging pedestrian detection and tracking in robotics navigation: A survey with practical illustrations
Journal Article (2025)
Journal
IEEE Access
Pages
158926-158937
Volume
13
Doc link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2025.3607191
File
Authors
Projects associated
SGR RAIG: Mobile Robotics and Artificial Intelligence Group
BotNet: Nou model de repartiment de paquets en superilles urbanes mitjançant una xarxa de vehicles elèctrics autònoms
LENA: Lifelong navigation learning using human-robot interaction
TRIFFID: auTonomous Robotic aId For increasing FIrst responDers efficiency
Abstract
Pedestrian Detection and Tracking (PDT) plays a pivotal role in enabling autonomous robots to navigate safely and efficiently in dynamic, human-populated environments. This paper presents a comprehensive survey of PDT methods, structured according to the sensing modalities employed: RGB cameras, LiDAR, thermal imaging, RGB-D sensors, and multi-modal fusion systems. For each category, we analyze representative techniques, synthesize their strengths and limitations, and discuss recent advancements including deep learning approaches and cross-modal fusion strategies. We highlight persistent challenges such as handling occlusions, achieving real-time performance, and ensuring robustness across diverse environments. In addition to this structured review, we provide two practical examples using the Ona autonomous robot platform (see Figure 1) to illustrate how PDT techniques can enhance robotic capabilities in real-world scenarios. These examples focus on improving SLAM consistency and enabling proxemic-aware navigation strategies. Through this survey, we aim to clarify the current state of the art, identify emerging trends, and suggest future research directions for robust and socially-aware robotic navigation.
Categories
intelligent robots, mobile robots, service robots.
Scientific reference
N. Picello, F. Herrero, S. Hernández, A. López and A. Santamaria-Navarro. Leveraging pedestrian detection and tracking in robotics navigation: A survey with practical illustrations. IEEE Access, 13: 158926-158937, 2025.
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