6 research outputs found

    Chaîne d'analyse et de synthèse de textures 3D basée sur une décomposition en pyramides orientées

    Get PDF
    Cette étude vise à l'extension en 3D de la méthode proposée par Portilla et Simoncelli en analyse-synthèse de textures. L'article présente une méthode fondée sur une décomposition 3D multi-résolution dans le domaine de Fourier pour la caractérisation des textures. Le but de ce travail est d'établir un lien entre les textures 3D et les paramètres extraits lors de la phase d'analyse. Les paramètres, validés par une étape de synthèse, sont alors exploitables à des fins de classification ou de segmentation

    Parallel extraction and simplification of large isosurfaces using an extended tandem algorithm

    Get PDF
    International audienceIn order to deal with the common trend in size increase of volumetric datasets, in the past few years research in isosurface extraction has focused on related aspects such as surface simplification and load-balanced parallel algorithms. We present a parallel, block-wise extension of the tandem algorithm by Attali et al., which simplifies on the fly an isosurface being extracted. Our approach minimizes the overall memory consumption using an adequate block splitting and merging strategy along with the introduction of a component dumping mechanism that drastically reduces the amount of memory needed for particular datasets such as those encountered in geophysics. As soon as detected, surface components are migrated to the disk along with a meta-data index (oriented bounding box, volume, etc.) that permits further improved exploration scenarios (small component removal or particularly oriented component selection for instance). For ease of implementation, we carefully describe a master and worker algorithm architecture that clearly separates the four required basic tasks. We show several results of our parallel algorithm applied on a geophysical dataset of size 7000 Ă— 1600 Ă— 2000

    Isosurface extraction and interpretation on very large datasets in geophysics

    Get PDF
    International audienceIn order to deal with the heavy trend in size increase of volumetric datasets, research in isosurface extraction has focused in the past few years on related aspects such as surface simplification and load balanced parallel algorithms. We present in this paper a parallel, bloc-wise extension of the tandem algorithm [Attali et al. 2005], which simplifies on the fly an isosurface being extracted. Our approach minimizes the overall memory consumption using an adequate bloc splitting and merging strategy and with the introduction of a component dumping mechanism that drastically reduces the amount of memory needed for particular datasets such as those encountered in geophysics. As soon as detected, surface components are migrated to the disk along with a meta-data index (oriented bounding box, volume, etc) that will allow further improved exploration scenarios (small components removal or particularly oriented components selection for instance). For ease of implementation, we carefully describe a master and slave algorithm architecture that clearly separates the four required basic tasks. We show several results of our parallel algorithm applied on a 7000Ă—1600Ă—2000 geophysics dataset

    Slimming Brick Cache Strategies for Seismic Horizon Propagation Algorithms

    Get PDF
    International audienceIn this paper, we propose a new bricked cache system suitable for a particular surface propagation algorithm : seismic horizon reconstruction. The application domain of this algorithm is the interpretation of seismic volumes used, for instance, by petroleum companies for oil prospecting. To ensure the optimality of such surface extraction, the algorithm must access randomly into the data volume. This lack of data locality imposes that the volume resides entirely in the main memory to reach decent performances. In case of volumes larger than the memory, we show that using a classical brick cache strategy can also produce good performances until a certain size. As the size of these volumes increases very quickly, and can now reach more than 200GB, we demonstrate that the performances of the classical algorithm are dramatically reduced when processed on standard workstation with a limited size of memory (currently 8GB to 16GB). In order to handle such large volumes, we introduce a new slimming brick cache strategy where bricks size evolves according to processed data : at each step of the algorithm, processed data could be removed from the cache. This new brick format allows to have a larger number of brick loaded in memory. We further improve the releasing mechanism by filling in priority the “holes” that appear in the surface during the propagation process. With this new cache strategy, horizons can be extracted into volumes that are up to 75 times the size of the available cache memory. We discuss the performances and results of this new approach applied on both synthetic and real data

    A PDE-Based Approach to Three-Dimensional Seismic Data Fusion

    No full text
    corecore