To address the issues of low exploration efficiency and “geometric myopia” caused by the lack of high-level environmental structure modeling for mobile robots in complex indoor environments, this paper proposes an active SLAM object navigation method based on Situational Semantic Augmented Graph (SSAG). Unlike methods that learn policies solely on pixel-level semantic maps or exploit only object-level relations for implicit association, this work elevates local observations online into a room-level topological graph and performs explicit semantic reasoning over unobserved regions. First, an online room segmentation algorithm is employed to transform unstructured sensory data into a structured graph representation that characterizes room-level functional attributes and topological associations. Subsequently, a Graph Attention Network (GAT) is utilized to perform explicit reasoning on the semantic attributes of unobserved regions, providing decision-making priors for long-range exploration. Building upon this, we introduce a Product of Experts (PoE) mechanism within the Proximal Policy Optimization (PPO) framework to deeply fuse semantic reasoning heatmaps with geometric hard constraints. This integration optimizes the target selection strategy, generating long-term navigation goals with superior semantic consistency and physical reachability. Experimental results on the Habitat simulator and Gibson dataset demonstrate that the proposed SSAG achieves a Success weighted by Path Length (SPL) of 0.340, outperforming SemExp and SemGO by 15.3% and 4.9%, respectively, with a total success rate of 68.4%. Notably, for object search tasks with strong spatial correlations (e.g., “bed” and “toilet”), the success rates reach 73.2% and 72.5%, representing a performance gain of over 20% compared to baseline methods. These results validate the effectiveness of room-level semantic reasoning for object navigation and demonstrate the capability of the proposed method to achieve efficient autonomous navigation in unknown, complex scenarios.
Tian et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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