88,365 research outputs found

    3D object reconstruction from 2D and 3D line drawings.

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    Chen, Yu.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2008.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 78-85).Abstracts in English and Chinese.Chapter 1 --- Introduction and Related Work --- p.1Chapter 1.1 --- Reconstruction from 2D Line Drawings and the Applications --- p.2Chapter 1.2 --- Previous Work on 3D Reconstruction from Single 2D Line Drawings --- p.4Chapter 1.3 --- Other Related Work on Interpretation of 2D Line Drawings --- p.5Chapter 1.3.1 --- Line Labeling and Superstrictness Problem --- p.6Chapter 1.3.2 --- CAD Reconstruction --- p.6Chapter 1.3.3 --- Modeling from Images --- p.6Chapter 1.3.4 --- Identifying Faces in the Line Drawings --- p.7Chapter 1.4 --- 3D Modeling Systems --- p.8Chapter 1.5 --- Research Problems and Our Contributions --- p.10Chapter 1.5.1 --- Recovering Complex Manifold Objects from Line Drawings --- p.10Chapter 1.5.2 --- The Vision-based Sketching System --- p.11Chapter 2 --- Reconstruction from Complex Line Drawings --- p.13Chapter 2.1 --- Introduction --- p.13Chapter 2.2 --- Assumptions and Terminology --- p.15Chapter 2.3 --- Separation of a Line Drawing --- p.17Chapter 2.3.1 --- Classification of Internal Faces --- p.18Chapter 2.3.2 --- Separating a Line Drawing along Internal Faces of Type 1 --- p.19Chapter 2.3.3 --- Detecting Internal Faces of Type 2 --- p.20Chapter 2.3.4 --- Separating a Line Drawing along Internal Faces of Type 2 --- p.28Chapter 2.4 --- 3D Reconstruction --- p.44Chapter 2.4.1 --- 3D Reconstruction from a Line Drawing --- p.44Chapter 2.4.2 --- Merging 3D Manifolds --- p.45Chapter 2.4.3 --- The Complete 3D Reconstruction Algorithm --- p.47Chapter 2.5 --- Experimental Results --- p.47Chapter 2.6 --- Summary --- p.52Chapter 3 --- A Vision-Based Sketching System for 3D Object Design --- p.54Chapter 3.1 --- Introduction --- p.54Chapter 3.2 --- The Sketching System --- p.55Chapter 3.3 --- 3D Geometry of the System --- p.56Chapter 3.3.1 --- Locating the Wand --- p.57Chapter 3.3.2 --- Calibration --- p.59Chapter 3.3.3 --- Working Space --- p.60Chapter 3.4 --- Wireframe Input and Object Editing --- p.62Chapter 3.5 --- Surface Generation --- p.63Chapter 3.5.1 --- Face Identification --- p.64Chapter 3.5.2 --- Planar Surface Generation --- p.65Chapter 3.5.3 --- Smooth Curved Surface Generation --- p.67Chapter 3.6 --- Experiments --- p.70Chapter 3.7 --- Summary --- p.72Chapter 4 --- Conclusion and Future Work --- p.74Chapter 4.1 --- Conclusion --- p.74Chapter 4.2 --- Future Work --- p.75Chapter 4.2.1 --- Learning-Based Line Drawing Reconstruction --- p.75Chapter 4.2.2 --- New Query Interface for 3D Object Retrieval --- p.75Chapter 4.2.3 --- Curved Object Reconstruction --- p.76Chapter 4.2.4 --- Improving the 3D Sketch System --- p.77Chapter 4.2.5 --- Other Directions --- p.77Bibliography --- p.7

    EU accession and Poland's external trade policy

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    Efficient Analysis of Complex Diagrams using Constraint-Based Parsing

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    This paper describes substantial advances in the analysis (parsing) of diagrams using constraint grammars. The addition of set types to the grammar and spatial indexing of the data make it possible to efficiently parse real diagrams of substantial complexity. The system is probably the first to demonstrate efficient diagram parsing using grammars that easily be retargeted to other domains. The work assumes that the diagrams are available as a flat collection of graphics primitives: lines, polygons, circles, Bezier curves and text. This is appropriate for future electronic documents or for vectorized diagrams converted from scanned images. The classes of diagrams that we have analyzed include x,y data graphs and genetic diagrams drawn from the biological literature, as well as finite state automata diagrams (states and arcs). As an example, parsing a four-part data graph composed of 133 primitives required 35 sec using Macintosh Common Lisp on a Macintosh Quadra 700.Comment: 9 pages, Postscript, no fonts, compressed, uuencoded. Composed in MSWord 5.1a for the Mac. To appear in ICDAR '95. Other versions at ftp://ftp.ccs.neu.edu/pub/people/futrell

    Sketching space

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    In this paper, we present a sketch modelling system which we call Stilton. The program resembles a desktop VRML browser, allowing a user to navigate a three-dimensional model in a perspective projection, or panoramic photographs, which the program maps onto the scene as a `floor' and `walls'. We place an imaginary two-dimensional drawing plane in front of the user, and any geometric information that user sketches onto this plane may be reconstructed to form solid objects through an optimization process. We show how the system can be used to reconstruct geometry from panoramic images, or to add new objects to an existing model. While panoramic imaging can greatly assist with some aspects of site familiarization and qualitative assessment of a site, without the addition of some foreground geometry they offer only limited utility in a design context. Therefore, we suggest that the system may be of use in `just-in-time' CAD recovery of complex environments, such as shop floors, or construction sites, by recovering objects through sketched overlays, where other methods such as automatic line-retrieval may be impossible. The result of using the system in this manner is the `sketching of space' - sketching out a volume around the user - and once the geometry has been recovered, the designer is free to quickly sketch design ideas into the newly constructed context, or analyze the space around them. Although end-user trials have not, as yet, been undertaken we believe that this implementation may afford a user-interface that is both accessible and robust, and that the rapid growth of pen-computing devices will further stimulate activity in this area

    Separation of line drawings based on split faces for 3D object reconstruction

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    © 2014 IEEE. Reconstructing 3D objects from single line drawings is often desirable in computer vision and graphics applications. If the line drawing of a complex 3D object is decomposed into primitives of simple shape, the object can be easily reconstructed. We propose an effective method to conduct the line drawing separation and turn a complex line drawing into parametric 3D models. This is achieved by recursively separating the line drawing using two types of split faces. Our experiments show that the proposed separation method can generate more basic and simple line drawings, and its combination with the example-based reconstruction can robustly recover wider range of complex parametric 3D objects than previous methods.This work was supported by grants from Science, Industry, Trade, and Information Technology Commission of Shenzhen Municipality (No. JC201005270378A), Guangdong Innovative Research Team Program (No. 201001D0104648280), Shenzhen Basic Research Program (JCYJ20120617114614438, JC201005270350A, JCYJ20120903092050890), Scientific Research Fund of Hunan Provincial Education Department (No. 13C073), Industrial Technology Research and Development Program of Hengyang Science and Technology Bureau (No.2013KG75), and the Construct Program of the Key Discipline in Hunan Provinc

    Proposal for a contents design of a graphic engineering lecture

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    In this project the subject of Industrial Design from the bachelor’s degree in Industrial Technologies and Economic Analysis of the ETSEIB is reviewed considering the contents and the teaching and evaluating methods. To acquire a great level and teach the subject with great quality, this project has been developed in order to grant that some of the best methods are used to teach and evaluate the students. The contents have also been reviewed to certify that a similar structure of contents is being followed the same way as some of the more relevant engineering schools. As this subject is part of the bachelor’s degree in Industrial Technologies and Economic Analysis, some of the subjects of the bachelor’s degree in Industrial Technologies, which is another degree from the ETSEIB, are used to compare and conclude the methods that could be used to benefit the subject. This has been done since these subjects have been used as a background to develop the contents and the organization of the Industrial Design subject. Research on some of the most relevant engineering schools in the world and in similar subjects such as Graphical Expression or Computer Aided Design has been done. This has determined the differences between the relevant and prestigious schools and the subjects of Graphical Expression or CAD. Once these different methods have been identified, they are considered to be applied to the organization of the subject, as a proposal, in order to enhance its quality and its reputation. To define which universities are better and more adequate for this project, some crucial facts have been used to reduce the research to a more specific group of engineering schools. The idea behind this project is to be able to clarify and help achieving a greater quality in the subject by reviewing some of the most relevant industrial design schools worldwide to apply some of the ways that they use to achieve such quality and reputation

    Wilkins Hill and the art of hermeneutical uncertainty

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    This article discusses the Neo-Conceptual Installation Art of Wendy Wilkins and Wes Hill, Brisbane-based artists currently residing in Berlin. The article discusses their conceptual development and their place within the art-world context

    Separate cortical stages in amodal completion revealed by functional magnetic resonance adaptation : research article

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    Background Objects in our environment are often partly occluded, yet we effortlessly perceive them as whole and complete. This phenomenon is called visual amodal completion. Psychophysical investigations suggest that the process of completion starts from a representation of the (visible) physical features of the stimulus and ends with a completed representation of the stimulus. The goal of our study was to investigate both stages of the completion process by localizing both brain regions involved in processing the physical features of the stimulus as well as brain regions representing the completed stimulus. Results Using fMRI adaptation we reveal clearly distinct regions in the visual cortex of humans involved in processing of amodal completion: early visual cortex - presumably V1 - processes the local contour information of the stimulus whereas regions in the inferior temporal cortex represent the completed shape. Furthermore, our data suggest that at the level of inferior temporal cortex information regarding the original local contour information is not preserved but replaced by the representation of the amodally completed percept. Conclusion These findings provide neuroimaging evidence for a multiple step theory of amodal completion and further insights into the neuronal correlates of visual perception
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