2,713 research outputs found

    Disconnected Skeleton: Shape at its Absolute Scale

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    We present a new skeletal representation along with a matching framework to address the deformable shape recognition problem. The disconnectedness arises as a result of excessive regularization that we use to describe a shape at an attainably coarse scale. Our motivation is to rely on the stable properties of the shape instead of inaccurately measured secondary details. The new representation does not suffer from the common instability problems of traditional connected skeletons, and the matching process gives quite successful results on a diverse database of 2D shapes. An important difference of our approach from the conventional use of the skeleton is that we replace the local coordinate frame with a global Euclidean frame supported by additional mechanisms to handle articulations and local boundary deformations. As a result, we can produce descriptions that are sensitive to any combination of changes in scale, position, orientation and articulation, as well as invariant ones.Comment: The work excluding {\S}V and {\S}VI has first appeared in 2005 ICCV: Aslan, C., Tari, S.: An Axis-Based Representation for Recognition. In ICCV(2005) 1339- 1346.; Aslan, C., : Disconnected Skeletons for Shape Recognition. Masters thesis, Department of Computer Engineering, Middle East Technical University, May 200

    Superquadrics and Angle-Preserving Transformations

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    Over the past 20 years, a great deal of interest has developed in the use of computer graphics and numerical methods for three-dimensional design. Significant progress in geometric modeling is being made, predominantly for objects best represented by lists of edges, faces, and vertices. One long-term goal of this work is a unified mathematical formalism, to form the basis of an interactive and intuitive design environment in which designers can simulate three-dimensional scenes with shading and texture, produce usable design images, verify numerical machining-control commands, and set up finite-element meshwork for structural and dynamic analysis. A new collection of smooth parametric objects and a new set of three-dimensional parametric modifiers show potential for helping to achieve this goal. The superquadric primitives and angle-preserving transformations extend the traditional geometric primitives-quadric surfaces and parametric patches-used in existing design packages, producing a new spectrum of flexible forms. Their chief advantage is that they allow complex solids and surfaces to be constructed and altered easily from a few interactive parameters

    Modelling Rod-like Flexible Biological Tissues for Medical Training

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    This paper outlines a framework for the modelling of slender rod-like biological tissue structures in both global and local scales. Volumetric discretization of a rod-like structure is expensive in computation and therefore is not ideal for applications where real-time performance is essential. In our approach, the Cosserat rod model is introduced to capture the global shape changes, which models the structure as a one-dimensional entity, while the local deformation is handled separately. In this way a good balance in accuracy and efficiency is achieved. These advantages make our method appropriate for the modelling of soft tissues for medical training applications

    Procedural function-based modelling of volumetric microstructures

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    We propose a new approach to modelling heterogeneous objects containing internal volumetric structures with size of details orders of magnitude smaller than the overall size of the object. The proposed function-based procedural representation provides compact, precise, and arbitrarily parameterised models of coherent microstructures, which can undergo blending, deformations, and other geometric operations, and can be directly rendered and fabricated without generating any auxiliary representations (such as polygonal meshes and voxel arrays). In particular, modelling of regular lattices and cellular microstructures as well as irregular porous media is discussed and illustrated. We also present a method to estimate parameters of the given model by fitting it to microstructure data obtained with magnetic resonance imaging and other measurements of natural and artificial objects. Examples of rendering and digital fabrication of microstructure models are presented

    Physics-Based Modeling of Nonrigid Objects for Vision and Graphics (Dissertation)

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    This thesis develops a physics-based framework for 3D shape and nonrigid motion modeling for computer vision and computer graphics. In computer vision it addresses the problems of complex 3D shape representation, shape reconstruction, quantitative model extraction from biomedical data for analysis and visualization, shape estimation, and motion tracking. In computer graphics it demonstrates the generative power of our framework to synthesize constrained shapes, nonrigid object motions and object interactions for the purposes of computer animation. Our framework is based on the use of a new class of dynamically deformable primitives which allow the combination of global and local deformations. It incorporates physical constraints to compose articulated models from deformable primitives and provides force-based techniques for fitting such models to sparse, noise-corrupted 2D and 3D visual data. The framework leads to shape and nonrigid motion estimators that exploit dynamically deformable models to track moving 3D objects from time-varying observations. We develop models with global deformation parameters which represent the salient shape features of natural parts, and local deformation parameters which capture shape details. In the context of computer graphics, these models represent the physics-based marriage of the parameterized and free-form modeling paradigms. An important benefit of their global/local descriptive power in the context of computer vision is that it can potentially satisfy the often conflicting requirements of shape reconstruction and shape recognition. The Lagrange equations of motion that govern our models, augmented by constraints, make them responsive to externally applied forces derived from input data or applied by the user. This system of differential equations is discretized using finite element methods and simulated through time using standard numerical techniques. We employ these equations to formulate a shape and nonrigid motion estimator. The estimator is a continuous extended Kalman filter that recursively transforms the discrepancy between the sensory data and the estimated model state into generalized forces. These adjust the translational, rotational, and deformational degrees of freedom such that the model evolves in a consistent fashion with the noisy data. We demonstrate the interactive time performance of our techniques in a series of experiments in computer vision, graphics, and visualization
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