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Data association is the process of relating features observed in the environment to features viewed previously or to features in a map. This paper presents a graph theoretic method that is applicable to data association problems where the features are observed via a batch process. Batch observations detect a set of features simultaneously or with sufficiently small temporal difference that, with motion compensation, the features can be represented with precise relative coordinates. This data association method is described in the context of two possible navigation applications: metric map building with simultaneous localisation, and topological map based localisation. Experimental results are presented using an indoor mobile robot with a 2D scanning laser sensor. Given two scans from different unknown locations, the features common to both scans are mapped to each other and the relative change in pose (position and orientation) of the vehicle between the two scans is obtained.
Bailey et al. (Thu,) studied this question.