13,987 research outputs found
A Comparison on Features Efficiency in Automatic Reconstruction of Archeological Broken Objects
Automatic reconstruction of archeological broken objects is an invaluable tool for restoration purposes and personnel. In this paper, we assume that broken pieces have similar characteristics on their common boundaries, when they are correctly combined. In this paper we work in a framework for the full reconstruction of the original objects using texture and surface design information on the sherd. The texture of a band outside the border of
pieces is predicted by inpainting and texture synthesis methods. Feature values are derived from these original and predicted images of pieces. We present a quantitative and qualitative comparison over a large set of features and over a large set of synthetic and real archeological broken objects
Near ground level sensing for spatial analysis of vegetation
Measured changes in vegetation indicate the dynamics of ecological processes and can identify the impacts from disturbances. Traditional methods of vegetation analysis tend to be slow because they are labor intensive; as a result, these methods are often confined to small local area measurements. Scientists need new algorithms and instruments that will allow them to efficiently study environmental dynamics across a range of different spatial scales. A new methodology that addresses this problem is presented. This methodology includes the acquisition, processing, and presentation of near ground level image data and its corresponding spatial characteristics. The systematic approach taken encompasses a feature extraction process, a supervised and unsupervised classification process, and a region labeling process yielding spatial information
On Nonrigid Shape Similarity and Correspondence
An important operation in geometry processing is finding the correspondences
between pairs of shapes. The Gromov-Hausdorff distance, a measure of
dissimilarity between metric spaces, has been found to be highly useful for
nonrigid shape comparison. Here, we explore the applicability of related shape
similarity measures to the problem of shape correspondence, adopting spectral
type distances. We propose to evaluate the spectral kernel distance, the
spectral embedding distance and the novel spectral quasi-conformal distance,
comparing the manifolds from different viewpoints. By matching the shapes in
the spectral domain, important attributes of surface structure are being
aligned. For the purpose of testing our ideas, we introduce a fully automatic
framework for finding intrinsic correspondence between two shapes. The proposed
method achieves state-of-the-art results on the Princeton isometric shape
matching protocol applied, as usual, to the TOSCA and SCAPE benchmarks
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