16,141 research outputs found
Learning Material-Aware Local Descriptors for 3D Shapes
Material understanding is critical for design, geometric modeling, and
analysis of functional objects. We enable material-aware 3D shape analysis by
employing a projective convolutional neural network architecture to learn
material- aware descriptors from view-based representations of 3D points for
point-wise material classification or material- aware retrieval. Unfortunately,
only a small fraction of shapes in 3D repositories are labeled with physical
mate- rials, posing a challenge for learning methods. To address this
challenge, we crowdsource a dataset of 3080 3D shapes with part-wise material
labels. We focus on furniture models which exhibit interesting structure and
material variabil- ity. In addition, we also contribute a high-quality expert-
labeled benchmark of 115 shapes from Herman-Miller and IKEA for evaluation. We
further apply a mesh-aware con- ditional random field, which incorporates
rotational and reflective symmetries, to smooth our local material predic-
tions across neighboring surface patches. We demonstrate the effectiveness of
our learned descriptors for automatic texturing, material-aware retrieval, and
physical simulation. The dataset and code will be publicly available.Comment: 3DV 201
Cooperative Multi-Cell Networks: Impact of Limited-Capacity Backhaul and Inter-Users Links
Cooperative technology is expected to have a great impact on the performance
of cellular or, more generally, infrastructure networks. Both multicell
processing (cooperation among base stations) and relaying (cooperation at the
user level) are currently being investigated. In this presentation, recent
results regarding the performance of multicell processing and user cooperation
under the assumption of limited-capacity interbase station and inter-user
links, respectively, are reviewed. The survey focuses on related results
derived for non-fading uplink and downlink channels of simple cellular system
models. The analytical treatment, facilitated by these simple setups, enhances
the insight into the limitations imposed by limited-capacity constraints on the
gains achievable by cooperative techniques
Scalable wavelet-based coding of irregular meshes with interactive region-of-interest support
This paper proposes a novel functionality in wavelet-based irregular mesh coding, which is interactive region-of-interest (ROI) support. The proposed approach enables the user to define the arbitrary ROIs at the decoder side and to prioritize and decode these regions at arbitrarily high-granularity levels. In this context, a novel adaptive wavelet transform for irregular meshes is proposed, which enables: 1) varying the resolution across the surface at arbitrarily fine-granularity levels and 2) dynamic tiling, which adapts the tile sizes to the local sampling densities at each resolution level. The proposed tiling approach enables a rate-distortion-optimal distribution of rate across spatial regions. When limiting the highest resolution ROI to the visible regions, the fine granularity of the proposed adaptive wavelet transform reduces the required amount of graphics memory by up to 50%. Furthermore, the required graphics memory for an arbitrary small ROI becomes negligible compared to rendering without ROI support, independent of any tiling decisions. Random access is provided by a novel dynamic tiling approach, which proves to be particularly beneficial for large models of over 10(6) similar to 10(7) vertices. The experiments show that the dynamic tiling introduces a limited lossless rate penalty compared to an equivalent codec without ROI support. Additionally, rate savings up to 85% are observed while decoding ROIs of tens of thousands of vertices
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