Researcher profile

Kristi A. Morgansen

Kristi A. Morgansen contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Observability Conditions and Filter Design for Visual Pose Estimation via Dual Quaternions

This paper presents a dual quaternion framework for 6-DOF visual target tracking that addresses key limitations of perspective-n-point (P$n$P) solvers: sensitivity to noise and outliers, and inability to propagate estimates through measurement dropouts. A nonlinear observability analysis is performed using a Lie algebraic approach, deriving sufficient conditions for local observability under two sensing modalities: relative position vector and unit vector measurements. For the unit vector case, the classical collinear feature point degeneracy of the perspective-three-point problem is recovered through rank analysis of the observability codistribution matrix, providing a control-theoretic interpretation of a previously geometric result. A dual quaternion Lie group unscented Kalman filter is then developed, directly modeling relative dynamics without assumptions about cooperative measurements or slowly-varying motion. Simulations demonstrate improved pose estimation accuracy and robustness to occlusions compared to an off-the-shelf P$n$P solver. Results are broadly applicable to visual-inertial navigation, simultaneous localization and mapping, and P$n$P solver development.

preprint2022arXiv

Neural-inspired Measurement Observability

The neural encoding by biological sensors of flying insects, which prefilters stimulus data before sending it to the central nervous system in the form of voltage spikes, enables sensing capabilities that are computationally low-cost while also being highly robust to noise. This process, which can be modeled as the composition of a linear moving average filter and a nonlinear decision function, inspired the work reported here to improve engineered sensing performance by maximizing the observability of particular neural-inspired composite measurement functions. We first present a tool to determine the observability of a linear system with measurement delay (the first element of the composition), then use a Lie algebraic observability approach to study nonlinear autonomous systems with output delay (the second element of the composition). The Lie algebraic tools are then extended to address overall observability of systems with composite outputs as in the neural encoder model we adopt. The analytical outcomes are supported using the empirical observability Gramian, and optimal sensor placement on a bioinspired wing model is performed using metrics based on the empirical Gramian.

preprint2022arXiv

On the sensitivity of pose estimation neural networks: rotation parameterizations, Lipschitz constants, and provable bounds

In this paper, we approach the task of determining sensitivity bounds for pose estimation neural networks. This task is particularly challenging as it requires characterizing the sensitivity of 3D rotations. We develop a sensitivity measure that describes the maximum rotational change in a network's output with respect to a Euclidean change in its input. We show that this measure is a type of Lipschitz constant, and that it is bounded by the product of a network's Euclidean Lipschitz constant and an intrinsic property of a rotation parameterization which we call the "distance ratio constant". We derive the distance ratio constant for several rotation parameterizations, and then discuss why the structure of most of these parameterizations makes it difficult to construct a pose estimation network with provable sensitivity bounds. However, we show that sensitivity bounds can be computed for networks which parameterize rotation using unconstrained exponential coordinates. We then construct and train such a network and compute sensitivity bounds for it.

preprint2020arXiv

Analytical bounds on the local Lipschitz constants of affine-ReLU functions

In this paper, we determine analytical bounds on the local Lipschitz constants of of affine functions composed with rectified linear units (ReLUs). Affine-ReLU functions represent a widely used layer in deep neural networks, due to the fact that convolution, fully-connected, and normalization functions are all affine, and are often followed by a ReLU activation function. Using an analytical approach, we mathematically determine upper bounds on the local Lipschitz constant of an affine-ReLU function, show how these bounds can be combined to determine a bound on an entire network, and discuss how the bounds can be efficiently computed, even for larger layers and networks. We show several examples by applying our results to AlexNet, as well as several smaller networks based on the MNIST and CIFAR-10 datasets. The results show that our method produces tighter bounds than the standard conservative bound (i.e. the product of the spectral norms of the layers' linear matrices), especially for small perturbations.

preprint2020arXiv

Empirical Observability Gramian for Stochastic Observability of Nonlinear Systems

We extend observability metrics based on the empirical observability Gramian from deterministic nonlinear systems to nonlinear stochastic systems in order to capture the impact of process noise on observability. We demonstrate that the empirical observability Gramian can be used to provide an equivalent condition for a definition of stochastic observability on linear systems, and that the Gramian can be used to extend stochastic observability to nonlinear stochastic systems. We further demonstrate through simulation that consideration of process noise can reveal observability in systems that would be considered unobservable using traditional deterministic tools.