8 research outputs found

    Animation, Simulation, and Control of Soft Characters using Layered Representations and Simplified Physics-based Methods

    Get PDF
    Realistic behavior of computer generated characters is key to bringing virtual environments, computer games, and other interactive applications to life. The plausibility of a virtual scene is strongly influenced by the way objects move around and interact with each other. Traditionally, actions are limited to motion capture driven or pre-scripted motion of the characters. Physics enhance the sense of realism: physical simulation is required to make objects act as expected in real life. To make gaming and virtual environments truly immersive,it is crucial to simulate the response of characters to collisions and to produce secondary effects such as skin wrinkling and muscle bulging. Unfortunately, existing techniques cannot generally achieve these effects in real time, do not address the coupled response of a character's skeleton and skin to collisions nor do they support artistic control. In this dissertation, I present interactive algorithms that enable physical simulation of deformable characters with high surface detail and support for intuitive deformation control. I propose a novel unified framework for real-time modeling of soft objects with skeletal deformations and surface deformation due to contact, and their interplay for object surfaces with up to tens of thousands of degrees of freedom.I make use of layered models to reduce computational complexity. I introduce dynamic deformation textures, which map three dimensional deformations in the deformable skin layer to a two dimensional domain for extremely efficient parallel computation of the dynamic elasticity equations and optimized hierarchical collision detection. I also enhance layered models with responsive contact handling, to support the interplay between skeletal motion and surface contact and the resulting two-way coupling effects. Finally, I present dynamic morph targets, which enable intuitive control of dynamic skin deformations at run-time by simply sculpting pose-specific surface shapes. The resulting framework enables real-time and directable simulation of soft articulated characters with frictional contact response, capturing the interplay between skeletal dynamics and complex,non-linear skin deformations

    Adaptive dynamics of articulated bodies

    Get PDF
    Forward dynamics is central to physically-based simulation and control of articulated bodies. We present an adaptive algorithm for computing forward dynamics of articulated bodies: using novel motion error metrics, our algorithm can automatically simplify the dynamics of a multi-body system, based on the desired number of degrees of freedom and the location of external forces and active joint forces. We demonstrate this method in plausible animation of articulated bodies, including a large-scale simulation of 200 animated humanoids and multi-body dynamics systems with many degrees of freedom. The graceful simplification allows us to achieve up to two orders of magnitude performance improvement in several complex benchmarks

    Interactive Haptic Rendering of High-Resolution Deformable Objects

    No full text
    We present an efficient algorithm for haptic rendering of deformable bodies with highly detailed surface geometry using a fast contact handling algorithm. We exploit a layered deformable representation to augment the physically based deformation simulation with efficient collision detection, contact handling and interactive haptic force feedback

    Button Simulation and Design via FDVV Models

    No full text
    | openaire: EC/H2020/637991/EU//COMPUTEDDesigning a push-button with desired sensation and performance is challenging because the mechanical construction must have the right response characteristics. Physical simulation of a button’s force-displacement (FD) response has been studied to facilitate prototyping; however, the simulations’ scope and realism have been limited. In this paper, we extend FD modeling to include vibration (V) and velocity-dependence characteristics (V). The resulting FDVV models better capture tactility characteristics of buttons, including snap. They increase the range of simulated buttons and the perceived realism relative to FD models. The paper also demonstrates methods for obtaining these models, editing them, and simulating accordingly. This end-to-end approach enables the analysis, prototyping, and optimization of buttons, and supports exploring designs that would be hard to implement mechanically.Peer reviewe
    corecore