162 research outputs found

    SHAPE DEFORMATION FOR OBJECTS OF GREATLY DISSIMILAR SHAPES WITH SMOOTH MANIFOLD

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    3D Mesh Simplification Techniques for Enhanced Image Based Rendering

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    Three dimensional videos and virtual reality applications are gaining wide range of popularity in recent years. Virtual reality creates the feeling of 'being there' and provides more realistic experience than conventional 2D media. In order to feel the immersive experience, it is important to satisfy two important criteria namely, visual quality of the video and timely rendering. However, it is quite impractical to satisfy these goals, especially on low capability devices such as mobile phones. Careful analysis of the depth map and further processing may help in achieving these goals considerably. Advanced developments in the graphics hardware tremendously reduced the time required to render the images to be displayed. However, along with this development, the demand for more realism tend to increase the complexity of the model of the virtual environment. Complex models require millions of primitives which subsequently means millions of polygons to represent it. Wise selection of rendering technique offer one of the ways to reduce the rendering speed. Mesh-based rendering is one of the techniques which enhances the speed of rendering as compared to its counterpart pixel based rendering. However, due to the demand for richer experience, the number of polygons required, always seem to exceed the number of polygons the graphics hardware can efficiently render. In practice, it is not feasible to store large number of polygons because of storage limitations in mobile phone hardware. Furthermore, number of polygons increase the rendering speed, which would necessitate more powerful devices. Mesh simplification techniques offer solution to deal with complex models. These methods simplify unimportant and redundant part of the model which helps in reducing the rendering cost without negatively effecting the visual quality of the scene. Mesh simplification has been extensively studied, however, it is not applied to all the areas. For example, depth is one of the areas where general available simplification methods are not very well suitable as most of the methods do not consider depth discontinuities very well. Moreover, some of the state of the art methods are not capable of handling high resolution depth maps. In this thesis, an attempt is made to address the problem of combining the depth maps with mesh simplification. Aim of the thesis is to reduce the computational cost of rendering by taking the homogeneous and planar areas of the depth map into account, while still maintaining suitable visual quality of the rendered image. Different depth decimation techniques are implemented and compared with the available state of the art methods. We demonstrate that the depth decimation technique which fits the plane to depth area and considers the depth discontinuities, outperforms the state of the art methods clearly

    Multi-Character Motion Retargeting for Large Scale Changes

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    Topology-Adaptive Mesh Deformation for Surface Evolution, Morphing, and Multi-View Reconstruction

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    International audienceTriangulated meshes have become ubiquitous discrete-surface representations. In this paper we address the problem of how to maintain the manifold properties of a surface while it undergoes strong deformations that may cause topological changes. We introduce a new self-intersection removal algorithm, TransforMesh, and we propose a mesh evolution framework based on this algorithm. Numerous shape modelling applications use surface evolution in order to improve shape properties, such as appearance or accuracy. Both explicit and implicit representations can be considered for that purpose. However, explicit mesh representations, while allowing for accurate surface modelling, suffer from the inherent difficulty of reliably dealing with self-intersections and topological changes such as merges and splits. As a consequence, a majority of methods rely on implicit representations of surfaces, e.g. level-sets, that naturally overcome these issues. Nevertheless, these methods are based on volumetric discretizations, which introduce an unwanted precision-complexity trade-off. The method that we propose handles topological changes in a robust manner and removes self intersections, thus overcoming the traditional limitations of mesh-based approaches. To illustrate the effectiveness of TransforMesh, we describe two challenging applications, namely surface morphing and 3-D reconstruction

    3D mesh metamorphosis from spherical parameterization for conceptual design

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    Engineering product design is an information intensive decision-making process that consists of several phases including design specification definition, design concepts generation, detailed design and analysis, and manufacturing. Usually, generating geometry models for visualization is a big challenge for early stage conceptual design. Complexity of existing computer aided design packages constrains participation of people with various backgrounds in the design process. In addition, many design processes do not take advantage of the rich amount of legacy information available for new concepts creation. The research presented here explores the use of advanced graphical techniques to quickly and efficiently merge legacy information with new design concepts to rapidly create new conceptual product designs. 3D mesh metamorphosis framework 3DMeshMorpher was created to construct new models by navigating in a shape-space of registered design models. The framework is composed of: i) a fast spherical parameterization method to map a geometric model (genus-0) onto a unit sphere; ii) a geometric feature identification and picking technique based on 3D skeleton extraction; and iii) a LOD controllable 3D remeshing scheme with spherical mesh subdivision based on the developedspherical parameterization. This efficient software framework enables designers to create numerous geometric concepts in real time with a simple graphical user interface. The spherical parameterization method is focused on closed genus-zero meshes. It is based upon barycentric coordinates with convex boundary. Unlike most existing similar approaches which deal with each vertex in the mesh equally, the method developed in this research focuses primarily on resolving overlapping areas, which helps speed the parameterization process. The algorithm starts by normalizing the source mesh onto a unit sphere and followed by some initial relaxation via Gauss-Seidel iterations. Due to its emphasis on solving only challenging overlapping regions, this parameterization process is much faster than existing spherical mapping methods. To ensure the correspondence of features from different models, we introduce a skeleton based feature identification and picking method for features alignment. Unlike traditional methods that align single point for each feature, this method can provide alignments for complete feature areas. This could help users to create more reasonable intermediate morphing results with preserved topological features. This skeleton featuring framework could potentially be extended to automatic features alignment for geometries with similar topologies. The skeleton extracted could also be applied for other applications such as skeleton-based animations. The 3D remeshing algorithm with spherical mesh subdivision is developed to generate a common connectivity for different mesh models. This method is derived from the concept of spherical mesh subdivision. The local recursive subdivision can be set to match the desired LOD (level of details) for source spherical mesh. Such LOD is controllable and this allows various outputs with different resolutions. Such recursive subdivision then follows by a triangular correction process which ensures valid triangulations for the remeshing. And the final mesh merging and reconstruction process produces the remeshing model with desired LOD specified from user. Usually the final merged model contains all the geometric details from each model with reasonable amount of vertices, unlike other existing methods that result in big amount of vertices in the merged model. Such multi-resolution outputs with controllable LOD could also be applied in various other computer graphics applications such as computer games

    Métamorphose de maillage 3D

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    Cette thèse de doctorat aborde spécifiquement le problème de la métamorphose entre différents maillages 3D, qui peut assurer un niveau élevé de qualité pour la séquence de transition, qui devrait être aussi lisse et progressive que possible, cohérente par rapport à la géométrie et la topologie, et visuellement agréable. Les différentes étapes impliquées dans le processus de transformation sont développées dans cette thèse. Nos premières contributions concernent deux approches différentes des paramétrisations: un algorithme de mappage barycentrique basé sur la préservation des rapports de longueur et une technique de paramétrisation sphérique, exploitant la courbure Gaussien. L'évaluation expérimentale, effectuées sur des modèles 3D de formes variées, démontré une amélioration considérable en termes de distorsion maillage pour les deux méthodes. Afin d aligner les caractéristiques des deux modèles d'entrée, nous avons considéré une technique de déformation basée sur la fonction radial CTPS C2a approprié pour déformer le mappage dans le domaine paramétrique et maintenir un mappage valide a travers le processus de mouvement. La dernière contribution consiste d une une nouvelle méthode qui construit un pseudo metamaillage qui évite l'exécution et le suivi des intersections d arêtes comme rencontrées dans l'état-of-the-art. En outre, notre méthode permet de réduire de manière drastique le nombre de sommets normalement nécessaires dans une structure supermesh. Le cadre générale de métamorphose a été intégré dans une application prototype de morphing qui permet à l'utilisateur d'opérer de façon interactive avec des modèles 3D et de contrôler chaque étape du processusThis Ph.D. thesis specifically deals with the issue of metamorphosis of 3D objects represented as 3D triangular meshes. The objective is to elaborate a complete 3D mesh morphing methodology which ensures high quality transition sequences, smooth and gradual, consistent with respect to both geometry and topology, and visually pleasant. Our first contributions concern the two different approaches of parameterization: a new barycentric mapping algorithm based on the preservation of the mesh length ratios, and a spherical parameterization technique, exploiting a Gaussian curvature criterion. The experimental evaluation, carried out on 3D models of various shapes, demonstrated a considerably improvement in terms of mesh distortion for both methods. In order to align the features of the two input models, we have considered a warping technique based on the CTPS C2a radial basis function suitable to deform the models embeddings in the parametric domain maintaining a valid mapping through the entire movement process. We show how this technique has to be adapted in order to warp meshes specified in the parametric domains. A final contribution consists of a novel algorithm for constructing a pseudo-metamesh that avoids the complex process of edge intersections encountered in the state-of-the-art. The obtained mesh structure is characterized by a small number of vertices and it is able to approximate both the source and target shapes. The entire mesh morphing framework has been integrated in an interactive application that allows the user to control and visualize all the stages of the morphing processEVRY-INT (912282302) / SudocSudocFranceF
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