DocumentCode
2659692
Title
Adaptive reconstruction of anatomical surfaces from human body measurements
Author
Knopf, George K. ; Abouhossein, Alireza
Author_Institution
Dept. of Mech. & Mater. Eng., Western Ontario Univ., London, Ont., Canada
Volume
2
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
1181
Abstract
A technique that adaptively fits a deformable Bezier surface to partial or whole human body measurements for free-form surface reconstruction is described. The proposed method utilizes an unconventional neural network, called a Bernstein basis function (BBF) network, which performs a weighted summation of rational Bernstein polynomial basis functions. Modifying the number of basis neurons is equivalent to changing the degree of the Bernstein polynomials. Each BBF network determines the control points of a low-order rational Bezier surface that best approximates the shape of randomly organized coordinate data. A key feature of the algorithm is that the measured data does not have to be re-ordered or parameterized prior to fitting. In addition, the rational Bezier surface retains the relative position of the parametric coordinates (u,v) as it deforms. Once the adaptation phase is complete, the weights of the network can be entered directly into a variety of commercially available geometric modeling and CAD/CAM packages for shape reconstruction. An experimental study is presented to demonstrate the effectiveness of the BBF network for generating rational Bezier surfaces
Keywords
CAD/CAM; adaptive signal processing; biology computing; image reconstruction; neural nets; polynomials; surface fitting; Bernstein basis function network; CAD/CAM packages; adaptive reconstruction; anatomical surfaces; basis neurons; control points; deformable Bezier surface fitting; free-form surface reconstruction; geometric modeling packages; low-order rational Bezier surface; neural network; parametric coordinates; partial human body measurements; randomly organized coordinate data; rational Bernstein polynomial basis functions; shape reconstruction; weighted summation; whole human body measurements; Anthropometry; Computer aided manufacturing; Humans; Neural networks; Neurons; Polynomials; Shape control; Solid modeling; Surface fitting; Surface reconstruction;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, 2000 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Nashville, TN
ISSN
1062-922X
Print_ISBN
0-7803-6583-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICSMC.2000.886012
Filename
886012
Link To Document