• DocumentCode
    1837330
  • Title

    A magnification lens for interactive volume visualization

  • Author

    LaMar, Eric ; Hamann, Bernd ; Joy, Kenneth I.

  • Author_Institution
    Center for Appl. Sci. Comput., Lawrence Livermore Nat. Lab., Berkeley, CA, USA
  • fYear
    2001
  • fDate
    2001
  • Firstpage
    223
  • Lastpage
    232
  • Abstract
    Volume visualization of large data sets suffers from the same problem that many other visualization modalities suffer from: either one can visualize the entire data set and lose small details or visualize a small region and lose the context. The authors we present a magnification lens technique for volume visualization. While the notion of a magnification-lens is not new, and other techniques attempt to simulate the physical properties of a magnifying lens, our contribution is in developing a magnification lens that is fast, can be implemented using a fairly small software overhead, and has a natural, intuitive appearance. The issue with magnification lens is the border, or transition region. The lens center and exterior have a constant zoom factor, and are simple to render. It is the border region that blends between the external and interior magnification, and has a nonconstant magnification. We use the "perspective-correct textures" capability, available in most current graphics systems, to produce a lens with a tessellated border region that approximates linear compression with respect to the radius of the magnification lens. We discuss how a "cubic" border can mitigate the discontinuities resulting from the use of a linear function, without significant performance loss. We discuss various issues concerning development of a three-dimensional magnification lens
  • Keywords
    data compression; data visualisation; image texture; interactive systems; rendering (computer graphics); very large databases; border region; constant zoom factor; cubic border; data set; interactive volume visualization; intuitive appearance; large data sets; lens center; linear compression; linear function; magnification lens; magnifying lens; nonconstant magnification; perspective correct textures; rendering; small software overhead; tessellated border region; three-dimensional magnification lens; visualization modalities; Computer science; Data visualization; Displays; Image processing; Laboratories; Lenses; Navigation; Pixel; Rendering (computer graphics); Scientific computing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Computer Graphics and Applications, 2001. Proceedings. Ninth Pacific Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Tokyo
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-1227-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/PCCGA.2001.962877
  • Filename
    962877