9 research outputs found

    Dictionary Learning-based Inpainting on Triangular Meshes

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    The problem of inpainting consists of filling missing or damaged regions in images and videos in such a way that the filling pattern does not produce artifacts that deviate from the original data. In addition to restoring the missing data, the inpainting technique can also be used to remove undesired objects. In this work, we address the problem of inpainting on surfaces through a new method based on dictionary learning and sparse coding. Our method learns the dictionary through the subdivision of the mesh into patches and rebuilds the mesh via a method of reconstruction inspired by the Non-local Means method on the computed sparse codes. One of the advantages of our method is that it is capable of filling the missing regions and simultaneously removes noise and enhances important features of the mesh. Moreover, the inpainting result is globally coherent as the representation based on the dictionaries captures all the geometric information in the transformed domain. We present two variations of the method: a direct one, in which the model is reconstructed and restored directly from the representation in the transformed domain and a second one, adaptive, in which the missing regions are recreated iteratively through the successive propagation of the sparse code computed in the hole boundaries, which guides the local reconstructions. The second method produces better results for large regions because the sparse codes of the patches are adapted according to the sparse codes of the boundary patches. Finally, we present and analyze experimental results that demonstrate the performance of our method compared to the literature

    Dictionary learning-based inpainting on triangular meshes

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    TesisAnaliza el problema de inpainting el cual consiste en rellenar regiones faltantes o dañados de tal forma que el patrón de llenado no produzca artefactos diferentes o no compatibles con los datos originales. En la presente tesis se propone un nuevo algoritmo de inpainting en superficies basado en el aprendizaje. El resultado obtenido con el método propuesto, elimina el ruido y resalta las características del dato originalTesi

    Graph-based compression of dynamic 3D point cloud sequences

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    This paper addresses the problem of compression of 3D point cloud sequences that are characterized by moving 3D positions and color attributes. As temporally successive point cloud frames are similar, motion estimation is key to effective compression of these sequences. It however remains a challenging problem as the point cloud frames have varying numbers of points without explicit correspondence information. We represent the time-varying geometry of these sequences with a set of graphs, and consider 3D positions and color attributes of the points clouds as signals on the vertices of the graphs. We then cast motion estimation as a feature matching problem between successive graphs. The motion is estimated on a sparse set of representative vertices using new spectral graph wavelet descriptors. A dense motion field is eventually interpolated by solving a graph-based regularization problem. The estimated motion is finally used for removing the temporal redundancy in the predictive coding of the 3D positions and the color characteristics of the point cloud sequences. Experimental results demonstrate that our method is able to accurately estimate the motion between consecutive frames. Moreover, motion estimation is shown to bring significant improvement in terms of the overall compression performance of the sequence. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first paper that exploits both the spatial correlation inside each frame (through the graph) and the temporal correlation between the frames (through the motion estimation) to compress the color and the geometry of 3D point cloud sequences in an efficient way

    Self-similarity for accurate compression of point sampled surfaces

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    Proceedings of Eurographics 2014International audienceMost surfaces, be it from a fine-art artifact or a mechanical object, are characterized by a strong self-similarity. This property finds its source in the natural structures of objects but also in the fabrication processes: regularity of the sculpting technique, or machine tool. In this paper, we propose to exploit the self-similarity of the underlying shapes for compressing point cloud surfaces which can contain millions of points at a very high precision. Our approach locally resamples the point cloud in order to highlight the self-similarity of the shape, while remaining consistent with the original shape and the scanner precision. It then uses this self-similarity to create an ad hoc dictionary on which the local neighborhoods will be sparsely represented, thus allowing for a light-weight representation of the total surface. We demonstrate the validity of our approach on several point clouds from fine-arts and mechanical objects, as well as a urban scene. In addition, we show that our approach also achieves a filtering of noise whose magnitude is smaller than the scanner precision

    Graph Signal Processing:Sparse Representation and Applications

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    Over the past few decades we have been experiencing an explosion of information generated by large networks of sensors and other data sources. Much of this data is intrinsically structured, such as traffic evolution in a transportation network, temperature values in different geographical locations, information diffusion in social networks, functional activities in the brain, or 3D meshes in computer graphics. The representation, analysis, and compression of such data is a challenging task and requires the development of new tools that can identify and properly exploit the data structure. In this thesis, we formulate the processing and analysis of structured data using the emerging framework of graph signal processing. Graphs are generic data representation forms, suitable for modeling the geometric structure of signals that live on topologically complicated domains. The vertices of the graph represent the discrete data domain, and the edge weights capture the pairwise relationships between the vertices. A graph signal is then defined as a function that assigns a real value to each vertex. Graph signal processing is a useful framework for handling efficiently such data as it takes into consideration both the signal and the graph structure. In this work, we develop new methods and study several important problems related to the representation and structure-aware processing of graph signals in both centralized and distributed settings. We focus in particular in the theory of sparse graph signal representation and its applications and we bring some insights towards better understanding the interplay between graphs and signals on graphs. First, we study a novel yet natural application of the graph signal processing framework for the representation of 3D point cloud sequences. We exploit graph-based transform signal representations for addressing the challenging problem of compression of data that is characterized by dynamic 3D positions and color attributes. Next, we depart from graph-based transform signal representations to design new overcomplete representations, or dictionaries, which are adapted to specific classes of graph signals. In particular, we address the problem of sparse representation of graph signals residing on weighted graphs by learning graph structured dictionaries that incorporate the intrinsic geometric structure of the irregular data domain and are adapted to the characteristics of the signals. Then, we move to the efficient processing of graph signals in distributed scenarios, such as sensor or camera networks, which brings important constraints in terms of communication and computation in realistic settings. In particular, we study the effect of quantization in the distributed processing of graph signals that are represented by graph spectral dictionaries and we show that the impact of the quantization depends on the graph geometry and on the structure of the spectral dictionaries. Finally, we focus on a widely used graph process, the problem of distributed average consensus in a sensor network where sensors exchange quantized information with their neighbors. We propose a novel quantization scheme that depends on the graph topology and exploits the increasing correlation between the values exchanged by the sensors throughout the iterations of the consensus algorithm
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