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
Link To Document