131 research outputs found

    Efficient global illumination calculation for inverse lighting problems

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    La luz es un elemento clave en la manera en que percibimos y experimentamos nuestro entorno. Como tal, es un objeto mas a modelar en el proceso de diseño, de forma similar a como ocurre con las formas y los materiales. Las intenciones de iluminacion (LI) son los objetivos y restricciones que el diseñador pretende alcanzar en el proceso del diseño de iluminaci´on: ¿qué superficies se deben iluminar con luz natural y cuales con luz artificial?, ¿qué zonas deben estar en sombra?, ¿cuales son las intensidades maximas y mínimas permitidas? Satisfacer las LI consiste en encontrar la ubicacion, forma e intensidad adecuada de las fuentes luminosas. Este tipo de problemas se define como un problema inverso de iluminacion (ILP) que se resuelve con tecnicas de optimizacion. En el contexto anterior, el objetivo de esta tesis consiste en proponer metodos eficientes para resolver ILP. Este objetivo es motivado por la brecha percibida entre los problemas habituales de diseño de iluminacion y las herramientas computacionales existentes para su resolucion. Las herramientas desarrolladas por la industria se especializan en evaluar configuraciones de iluminacion previamente diseñadas, y las desarrolladas por la academia resuelven problemas relativamente sencillos a costos elevados. Las propuestas cubren distintos aspectos del proceso de optimizacion, que van desde la formulacion del problema a su resolucion. Estan desarrolladas para el caso en que las superficies poseen reflexion e iluminacion difusas y se basan en el calculo de una aproximacion de rango bajo de la matriz de radiosidad. Algunos resultados obtenidos son: el calculo acelerado de la radiosidad de la escena en una unidad de procesamiento gr´afico (GPU); el uso de la heuristica \201Cvariable neighborhood search\201D (VNS) para la resolucion de ILP; el planteo de una estructura multinivel para tratar ILP de forma escalonada; y el uso de tecnicas para optimizar la configuracion de filtros de luz. Otros resultados obtenidos se basan en la formulacion de las LI en funcion de la media y desviacion estandar de las radiosidades halladas. Se propone un metodo para generar LI que contengan esos parametros estadisticos, y otro metodo para acelerar su evaluacion. Con estos resultados se logran tiempos de respuesta interactivos. Por último, las tecnicas anteriores adolecen de una etapa de pre-cómputo relativamente costosa, por tanto se propone acelerar el calculo de la inversa de la matriz de radiosidad a partir de una muestra de factores de forma. Los métodos aquí presentados fueron publicados en seis articulos, tres de ellos en congresos internacionales y tres en revistas arbitradas.Light is a key element that influences the way we perceive and experience our environment. As such, light is an object to be modeled in the design process, as happens with the forms and materials. The lighting intentions (LI) are the objectives and constraints that designers want to achieve in the process of lighting design: which surfaces should be illuminated with natural and which with artificial light?, which surfaces should be in shadow?, which are the maximum and minimum intensities allowed? The fulfillment of the LI consists in finding the location, shape and intensity appropriate for the light sources. This problem is defined as an inverse lighting problem (ILP), solved by optimization techniques. In the above context, the aim of this thesis is the proposal of efficient methods to solve ILP. This objective is motivated by the perceived gap between the usual problems of lighting design, and the computational tools developed for its resolution. The tools developed by the industry specialize in evaluating previously designed lighting configurations, and those developed by the academia solve relatively simple problems at a high computational cost. The proposals cover several aspects of the optimization process, ranging from the formulation of the problem to its resolution. They are developed for the case in which the surfaces have Lambertian reflection and illumination, and are based on the calculation of a low rank approximation to the radiosity matrix. Some results are: rapid calculation of radiosity of the scene in a graphics processing unit (GPU), the use of heuristics “variable neighborhood search” (VNS) for solving ILP, the proposition of a multilevel structure to solve ILP in a stepwise approach, and the use of these techniques to optimize the configuration of light filters. Other results are based on the formulation of LI that use the mean and standard deviation of the radiosity values found. A method is proposed for generating LI containing these parameters, and another method is developed to speed up their evaluations. With these results we achieve interactive response times. Finally, the above techniques suffer from a costly pre-computing stage and therefore, a method is proposed to accelerate the calculation of the radiosity inverse matrix based on a sample of the form factors. The methods presented here were published in six articles, three of them at international conferences and three in peer reviewed journals

    Virtual tour

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    Interactive 3D Visualization of Architectural models might be the best way to get some idea about an Architecture Plan. Photo-realistic visualization often attracts the investors and customers for whom the architectural blueprints are obscure. Architectural Visualization is considered to have a bright future ahead of it as more and more architects and real estate developers are using this technology. Virtual Walk-through can give not only ideas about your building but its interiors and design too. The Architectural Virtual Environment also most widely used in Gaming and Entertainment Industry in creating a complex movie scenes or a game environment

    GPU-based ultra-fast direct aperture optimization for online adaptive radiation therapy

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    Online adaptive radiation therapy (ART) has great promise to significantly reduce normal tissue toxicity and/or improve tumor control through real-time treatment adaptations based on the current patient anatomy. However, the major technical obstacle for clinical realization of online ART, namely the inability to achieve real-time efficiency in treatment re-planning, has yet to be solved. To overcome this challenge, this paper presents our work on the implementation of an intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) direct aperture optimization (DAO) algorithm on graphics processing unit (GPU) based on our previous work on CPU. We formulate the DAO problem as a large-scale convex programming problem, and use an exact method called column generation approach to deal with its extremely large dimensionality on GPU. Five 9-field prostate and five 5-field head-and-neck IMRT clinical cases with 5\times5 mm2 beamlet size and 2.5\times2.5\times2.5 mm3 voxel size were used to evaluate our algorithm on GPU. It takes only 0.7~2.5 seconds for our implementation to generate optimal treatment plans using 50 MLC apertures on an NVIDIA Tesla C1060 GPU card. Our work has therefore solved a major problem in developing ultra-fast (re-)planning technologies for online ART

    Hierarchical N-Body problem on graphics processor unit

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    Galactic simulation is an important cosmological computation, and represents a classical N-body problem suitable for implementation on vector processors. Barnes-Hut algorithm is a hierarchical N-Body method used to simulate such galactic evolution systems. Stream processing architectures expose data locality and concurrency available in multimedia applications. On the other hand, there are numerous compute-intensive scientific or engineering applications that can potentially benefit from such computational and communication models. These applications are traditionally implemented on vector processors. Stream architecture based graphics processor units (GPUs) present a novel computational alternative for efficiently implementing such high-performance applications. Rendering on a stream architecture sustains high performance, while user-programmable modules allow implementing complex algorithms efficiently. GPUs have evolved over the years, from being fixed-function pipelines to user programmable processors. In this thesis, we focus on the implementation of Barnes-Hut algorithm on typical current-generation programmable GPUs. We exploit computation and communication requirements present in Barnes-Hut algorithm to expose their suitability for user-programmable GPUs. Our implementation of the Barnes-Hut algorithm is formulated as a fragment shader targeting the selected GPU. We discuss implementation details, design issues, results, and challenges encountered in programming the fragment shader

    Algorithms and Methods for Imaging of Brain Activity from Non-Invasive Techniques

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    The imaging of brain activity, also called “Functional Neuroimaging”, is used to understand the relationship between activity in certain brain areas and specific functions. These techniques include fMRI (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging), PET (Positron Emittance Tomography), EIT (Electrical Impedance Tomography), EEG (ElectroEncephaloGraphy) and DOT (Diffuse Optical Tomography) and are widely used in the study of brain activity. In addition to clinical usage, analysis of brain activity is gaining popularity in others recent fields, i.e. Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI) and the study of cognitive processes. In these contexts, usage of classical solutions (fMRI and PET) could be unfeasible, due to their low temporal resolution, high cost and limited portability. For these reasons, portable low cost techniques are objects of the proposed thesis’s research, with focus on DOT and EEG. The main contribution of this thesis focuses on the implementation of a numerical solver for DOT based on the radiosity-diffusion model, integrating the anatomical information provided by a structural MRI.In particular, we obtained a 7x speed-up over an single run of isotropic-scattered parallel Monte Carlo engine for a domain of 2 million voxels, with an accuracy comparable to 10 runs of anisotropic scattered Monte Carlo in the same geometry. The speed-up significantly increases for larger domains, allowing one to compute the light distribution of a full human head (about 3 million voxels) in 116 seconds for the platform used. The secondary contribution of this thesis focuses on EEG and it concerns the implementation of software libraries for time-domain source localization in the scope of an open-source framework called Creamino, which can be used to simplify and speed-up the design of BCI systems. It consists of firmware and software libraries that allow designers to connect new EEG platforms to software tools for BCI

    Radiation techniques for urban thermal simulation with the Finite Element Method

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    Modern societies are increasingly organized in cities. In the present times, more than half of the world’s population lives in urban settlements. In this context, architectural and building scale works have the need of extending their scope to the urban environment. One of the main challenges of these times is understanting all the thermal exchanges that happen in the city. The radiative part appears as the less developed one; its characterization and interaction with built structures has gained attention for building physics, architecture and environmental engineering. Providing a linkage between these areas, the emerging field of urban physics has become important for tackling studies of such nature. Urban thermal studies are intrinsically linked to multidisciplinary work approaches. Performing full-scale measurements is hard, and prototype models are difficult to develop. Therefore, computational simulations are essential in order to understand how the city behaves and to evaluate projected modifications. The methodological and algorithmic improvement of simulation is one of the mainlines of work for computational physics and many areas of computer science. The field of computer graphics has addressed the adaptation of rendering algorithms to daylighting using physically-based radiation models on architectural scenes. The Finite Element Method (FEM) has been widely used for thermal analysis. The maturity achieved by FEM software allows for treating very large models with a high geometrical detail and complexity. However, computing radiation exchanges in this context implies a hard computational challenge, and forces to push the limits of existing physical models. Computer graphics techniques can be adapted to FEM to estimate solar loads. In the thermal radiation range, the memory requirements for storing the interaction between the elements grows because all the urban surfaces become radiation sources. In this thesis, a FEM-based methodology for urban thermal analysis is presented. A set of radiation techniques (both for solar and thermal radiation) are developed and integrated into the FEM software Cast3m. Radiosity and ray tracing are used as the main algorithms for radiation computations. Several studies are performed for different city scenes. The FEM simulation results are com-pared with measured temperature results obtained by means of urban thermography. Post-processing techniques are used to obtain rendered thermograms, showing that the proposed methodology pro-duces accurate results for the cases analyzed. Moreover, its good computational performance allows for performing this kind of study using regular desktop PCs.Las sociedades modernas están cada vez más organizadas en ciudades. Más de la mitad de la población mundial vive en asentamientos urbanos en la actualidad. En este contexto, los trabajos a escala arquitectónica y de edificio deben extender su alcance al ambiente urbano. Uno de los mayores desafíos de estos tiempos consiste en entender todos los intercambios térmicos que suceden en la ciudad. La parte radiativa es la menos desarrollada; su caracterización y su interacción con edificaciones ha ganado la atención de la física de edificios, la arquitectura y la ingeniería ambiental. Como herramienta de conexión entre estas áreas, la física urbana es un área que resulta importante para atacar estudios de tal naturaleza. Los estudios térmicos urbanos están intrinsecamente asociados a trabajos multidisciplinarios. Llevar a cabo mediciones a escala real resulta difícil, y el desarrollo de prototipos de menor escala es complejo. Por lo tanto, la simulación computacional es esencial para entender el comportamiento de la ciudad y para evaluar modificaciones proyectadas. La mejora metodológica y algorítmica de las simulaciones es una de las mayores líneas de trabajo para la física computacional y muchas áreas de las ciencias de la computación. El área de la computación gráfica ha abordado la adaptación de algoritmos de rendering para cómputo de iluminación natural, utilizando modelos de radiación basados en la física y aplicándolos sobre escenas arquitectónicas. El Método de Elementos Finitos (MEF) ha sido ampliamente utilizado para análisis térmico. La madurez alcanzada por soluciones de software MEF permite tratar grandes modelos con un alto nivel de detalle y complejidad geométrica. Sin embargo, el cómputo del intercambio radiativo en este contexto implica un desafío computacional, y obliga a empujar los límites de las descripciones físicas conocidas. Algunas técnicas de computación gráfica pueden ser adaptadas a MEF para estimar las cargas solares. En el espectro de radiación térmica, los requisitos de memoria necesarios para almacenar la interacción entre los elementos crecen debido a que todas las superficies urbanas se transforman en fuentes emisoras de radiación. En esta tesis se presenta una metodología basada en MEF para el análisis térmico de escenas urbanas. Un conjunto de técnicas de radiación (para radiación solar y térmica) son desarrolladas e integradas en el software MEF Cast3m. Los algoritmos de radiosidad y ray tracing son utilizados para el cómputo radiativo. Se presentan varios estudios que utilizan diferentes modelos de ciudades. Los resultados obtenidos mediante MEF son comparados con temperaturas medidas por medio de termografías urbanas. Se utilizan técnicas de post-procesamiento para renderizar imágenes térmicas, que permiten concluir que la metodología propuesta produce resultados precisos para los casos analizados. Asimismo, su buen desempeño computacional posibilita realizar este tipo de estudios en computadoras personales

    Towards Predictive Rendering in Virtual Reality

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    The strive for generating predictive images, i.e., images representing radiometrically correct renditions of reality, has been a longstanding problem in computer graphics. The exactness of such images is extremely important for Virtual Reality applications like Virtual Prototyping, where users need to make decisions impacting large investments based on the simulated images. Unfortunately, generation of predictive imagery is still an unsolved problem due to manifold reasons, especially if real-time restrictions apply. First, existing scenes used for rendering are not modeled accurately enough to create predictive images. Second, even with huge computational efforts existing rendering algorithms are not able to produce radiometrically correct images. Third, current display devices need to convert rendered images into some low-dimensional color space, which prohibits display of radiometrically correct images. Overcoming these limitations is the focus of current state-of-the-art research. This thesis also contributes to this task. First, it briefly introduces the necessary background and identifies the steps required for real-time predictive image generation. Then, existing techniques targeting these steps are presented and their limitations are pointed out. To solve some of the remaining problems, novel techniques are proposed. They cover various steps in the predictive image generation process, ranging from accurate scene modeling over efficient data representation to high-quality, real-time rendering. A special focus of this thesis lays on real-time generation of predictive images using bidirectional texture functions (BTFs), i.e., very accurate representations for spatially varying surface materials. The techniques proposed by this thesis enable efficient handling of BTFs by compressing the huge amount of data contained in this material representation, applying them to geometric surfaces using texture and BTF synthesis techniques, and rendering BTF covered objects in real-time. Further approaches proposed in this thesis target inclusion of real-time global illumination effects or more efficient rendering using novel level-of-detail representations for geometric objects. Finally, this thesis assesses the rendering quality achievable with BTF materials, indicating a significant increase in realism but also confirming the remainder of problems to be solved to achieve truly predictive image generation
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