344 research outputs found
Guided mesh normal filtering
The joint bilateral filter is a variant of the standard bilateral filter, where the range kernel is evaluated using a guidance signal instead of the original signal. It has been successfully applied to various image processing problems, where it provides more flexibility than the standard bilateral filter to achieve high quality results. On the other hand, its success is heavily dependent on the guidance signal, which should ideally provide a robust estimation about the features of the output signal. Such a guidance signal is not always easy to construct. In this paper, we propose a novel mesh normal filtering framework based on the joint bilateral filter, with applications in mesh denoising. Our framework is designed as a two-stage process: first, we apply joint bilateral filtering to the face normals, using a properly constructed normal field as the guidance; afterwards, the vertex positions are updated according to the filtered face normals. We compute the guidance normal on a face using a neighboring patch with the most consistent normal orientations, which provides a reliable estimation of the true normal even with a high-level of noise. The effectiveness of our approach is validated by extensive experimental results
Iso-level tool path planning for free-form surfaces
The aim of tool path planning is to maximize the efficiency against some given precision criteria. In practice, scallop height should be kept constant to avoid unnecessary cutting, while the tool path should be smooth enough to maintain a high feed rate. However, iso-scallop and smoothness often conflict with each other. Existing methods smooth iso-scallop paths one-by-one, which make the final tool path far from being globally optimal. This paper proposes a new framework for tool path optimization. It views a family of iso-level curves of a scalar function defined over the surface as tool path so that desired tool path can be generated by finding the function that minimizes certain energy functional and different objectives can be considered simultaneously. We use the framework to plan globally optimal tool path with respect to iso-scallop and smoothness. The energy functionals for planning iso-scallop, smoothness, and optimal tool path are respectively derived, and the path topology is studied too. Experimental results are given to show effectiveness of the proposed methods
Static/Dynamic Filtering for Mesh Geometry
The joint bilateral filter, which enables feature-preserving signal smoothing
according to the structural information from a guidance, has been applied for
various tasks in geometry processing. Existing methods either rely on a static
guidance that may be inconsistent with the input and lead to unsatisfactory
results, or a dynamic guidance that is automatically updated but sensitive to
noises and outliers. Inspired by recent advances in image filtering, we propose
a new geometry filtering technique called static/dynamic filter, which utilizes
both static and dynamic guidances to achieve state-of-the-art results. The
proposed filter is based on a nonlinear optimization that enforces smoothness
of the signal while preserving variations that correspond to features of
certain scales. We develop an efficient iterative solver for the problem, which
unifies existing filters that are based on static or dynamic guidances. The
filter can be applied to mesh face normals followed by vertex position update,
to achieve scale-aware and feature-preserving filtering of mesh geometry. It
also works well for other types of signals defined on mesh surfaces, such as
texture colors. Extensive experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of
the proposed filter for various geometry processing applications such as mesh
denoising, geometry feature enhancement, and texture color filtering
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Epigenetic Down-Regulation of Sirt 1 via DNA Methylation and Oxidative Stress Signaling Contributes to the Gestational Diabetes Mellitus-Induced Fetal Programming of Heart Ischemia-Sensitive Phenotype in Late Life.
Rationale: The incidence of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is increasing worldwide. However, whether and how GDM exposure induces fetal programming of adult cardiac dysfunctional phenotype, especially the underlying epigenetic molecular mechanisms and theranostics remain unclear. To address this problem, we developed a late GDM rat model. Methods: Pregnant rats were made diabetic on day 12 of gestation by streptozotocin (STZ). Experiments were conducted in 6 weeks old offspring. Results: There were significant increases in ischemia-induced cardiac infarction and gender-dependent left ventricular (LV) dysfunction in male offspring in GDM group as compared to controls. Exposure to GDM enhanced ROS level and caused a global DNA methylation in offspring cardiomyocytes. GDM attenuated cardiac Sirt 1 protein and p-Akt/Akt levels, but enhanced autophagy-related proteins expression (Atg 5 and LC3 II/LC3 I) as compared to controls. Ex-vivo treatment of DNA methylation inhibitor, 5-Aza directly inhibited Dnmt3A and enhanced Sirt 1 protein expression in fetal hearts. Furthermore, treatment with antioxidant, N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) in offspring reversed GDM-mediated DNA hypermethylation, Sirt1 repression and autophagy-related gene protein overexpression in the hearts, and rescued GDM-induced deterioration in heart ischemic injury and LV dysfunction. Conclusion: Our data indicated that exposure to GDM induced offspring cardiac oxidative stress and DNA hypermethylation, resulting in an epigenetic down-regulation of Sirt1 gene and aberrant development of heart ischemia-sensitive phenotype, which suggests that Sirt 1-mediated signaling is the potential therapeutic target for the heart ischemic disease in offspring
Correlated Dynamics of the O(P-3) + CHD3(v=0) Reaction : A Joint Crossed-Beam and Quasiclassical Trajectory Study
Crossed beam experiments and quasiclassical trajectory computations on an ab initio potential energy surface are performed for the O(P-3) + CHD3(v=0) --> OH(V'=0) + CD3(v(2)=0,2) and OD(v'=0,1) + CHD2(v=0) reactions. Both experiment and theory show that the excitation functions display a concave-up behavior and the angular distributions are backward scattered, indicating a direct rebound mechanism and a tight-bend transition state. The reaction produces mainly ground-state products showing the dominance of a vibrationally adiabatic reaction pathway. The Standard histogram binning cannot reproduce the observed vibrational adiabaticity, Whereas Gausgian binning give good agreement with experitnent
A fast numerical solver for local barycentric coordinates
The local barycentric coordinates (LBC), proposed in Zhang et al (2014), demonstrate good locality and can be used for local control on function value interpolation and shape deformation. However, it has no closed- form expression and must be computed by solving an optimization problem, which can be time-consuming especially for high-resolution models. In this paper, we propose a new technique to compute LBC efficiently. The new solver is developed based on two key insights. First, we prove that the non-negativity constraints in the original LBC formulation is not necessary, and can be removed without affecting the solution of the optimization problem. Furthermore, the removal of this constraint allows us to reformulate the computation of LBC as a convex constrained optimization for its gradients, followed by a fast integration to recover the coordinate values. The reformulated gradient optimization problem can be solved using ADMM, where each step is trivially parallelizable and does not involve global linear system solving, making it much more scalable and efficient than the original LBC solver. Numerical experiments verify the effectiveness of our technique on a large variety of models
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Inhibition of Autophagy Signaling via 3-methyladenine Rescued Nicotine-Mediated Cardiac Pathological Effects and Heart Dysfunctions.
Rationale: Cigarette smoking is a well-established risk factor for myocardial infarction and sudden cardiac death. The deleterious effects are mainly due to nicotine, but the mechanisms involved and theranostics remain unclear. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that nicotine exposure increases the heart sensitivity to ischemia/reperfusion injury and dysfunction, which can be rescued by autophagy inhibitor. Methods: Nicotine or saline was administered to adult rats via subcutaneous osmotic minipumps in the absence or presence of an autophagy inhibitor, 3-methyladenine (3-MA). After 30 days of nicotine treatment, the rats underwent the cardiac ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) procedure and echocardiography analysis, and the heart tissues were isolated for molecular biological studies. Results: Nicotine exposure increased I/R-induced cardiac injury and cardiac dysfunction as compared to the control. The levels of autophagy-related proteins including LC3 II, P62, Beclin1, and Atg5 were upregulated in the reperfused hearts isolated from nicotine-treated group. In addition, nicotine enhanced cardiac and plasma ROS production, and increased the phosphorylation of GSK3β (ser9) in the left ventricle tissues. Treatment with 3-MA abolished nicotine-mediated increase in the levels of autophagy-related proteins and phosphorylation of GSK3β, but had no effect on ROS production. Of importance, 3-MA ameliorated the augmented I/R-induced cardiac injury and dysfunction in the nicotine-treated group as compared to the control. Conclusion: Our results demonstrate that nicotine exposure enhances autophagy signaling pathway, resulting in development of ischemic-sensitive phenotype of heart. It suggests a potentially novel therapeutic strategy of autophagy inhibition for the treatment of ischemic heart disease
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