Here is my implementation of the Kalman filter based on the equations given on wikipedia. Please be aware that my understanding of Kalman filters is very rudimentary so there are most likely ways to improve this code. (For example, it suffers from the numerical instability problem discussed here. As I understand it, this only affects the numerical stability when Q
, the motion noise, is very small. In real life, the noise is usually not small, so fortunately (at least for my implementation) in practice the numerical instability does not show up.)
In the example below, kalman_xy
assumes the state vector is a 4-tuple: 2 numbers for the location, and 2 numbers for the velocity.
The F
and H
matrices have been defined specifically for this state vector: If x
is a 4-tuple state, then
new_x = F * x
position = H * x
It then calls kalman
, which is the generalized Kalman filter. It is general in the sense it is still useful if you wish to define a different state vector -- perhaps a 6-tuple representing location, velocity and acceleration. You just have to define the equations of motion by supplying the appropriate F
and H
.
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
def kalman_xy(x, P, measurement, R,
motion = np.matrix('0. 0. 0. 0.').T,
Q = np.matrix(np.eye(4))):
"""
Parameters:
x: initial state 4-tuple of location and velocity: (x0, x1, x0_dot, x1_dot)
P: initial uncertainty convariance matrix
measurement: observed position
R: measurement noise
motion: external motion added to state vector x
Q: motion noise (same shape as P)
"""
return kalman(x, P, measurement, R, motion, Q,
F = np.matrix('''
1. 0. 1. 0.;
0. 1. 0. 1.;
0. 0. 1. 0.;
0. 0. 0. 1.
'''),
H = np.matrix('''
1. 0. 0. 0.;
0. 1. 0. 0.'''))
def kalman(x, P, measurement, R, motion, Q, F, H):
'''
Parameters:
x: initial state
P: initial uncertainty convariance matrix
measurement: observed position (same shape as H*x)
R: measurement noise (same shape as H)
motion: external motion added to state vector x
Q: motion noise (same shape as P)
F: next state function: x_prime = F*x
H: measurement function: position = H*x
Return: the updated and predicted new values for (x, P)
See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalman_filter
This version of kalman can be applied to many different situations by
appropriately defining F and H
'''
# UPDATE x, P based on measurement m
# distance between measured and current position-belief
y = np.matrix(measurement).T - H * x
S = H * P * H.T + R # residual convariance
K = P * H.T * S.I # Kalman gain
x = x + K*y
I = np.matrix(np.eye(F.shape[0])) # identity matrix
P = (I - K*H)*P
# PREDICT x, P based on motion
x = F*x + motion
P = F*P*F.T + Q
return x, P
def demo_kalman_xy():
x = np.matrix('0. 0. 0. 0.').T
P = np.matrix(np.eye(4))*1000 # initial uncertainty
N = 20
true_x = np.linspace(0.0, 10.0, N)
true_y = true_x**2
observed_x = true_x + 0.05*np.random.random(N)*true_x
observed_y = true_y + 0.05*np.random.random(N)*true_y
plt.plot(observed_x, observed_y, 'ro')
result = []
R = 0.01**2
for meas in zip(observed_x, observed_y):
x, P = kalman_xy(x, P, meas, R)
result.append((x[:2]).tolist())
kalman_x, kalman_y = zip(*result)
plt.plot(kalman_x, kalman_y, 'g-')
plt.show()
demo_kalman_xy()
The red dots show the noisy position measurements, the green line shows the Kalman predicted positions.