Title of article :
Geometry-aware bases for shape approximation
Author/Authors :
Sorkine، نويسنده , , O.، نويسنده , , Cohen-Or، نويسنده , , D.، نويسنده , , Irony، نويسنده , , D.، نويسنده , , Toledo، نويسنده , , S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
We introduce a new class of shape approximation techniques for irregular triangular meshes. Our method approximates
the geometry of the mesh using a linear combination of a small number of basis vectors. The basis vectors are functions of the mesh
connectivity and of the mesh indices of a number of anchor vertices. There is a fundamental difference between the bases generated
by our method and those generated by geometry-oblivious methods, such as Laplacian-based spectral methods. In the latter methods,
the basis vectors are functions of the connectivity alone. The basis vectors of our method, in contrast, are geometry-aware since they
depend on both the connectivity and on a binary tagging of vertices that are “geometrically important” in the given mesh (e.g.,
extrema). We show that, by defining the basis vectors to be the solutions of certain least-squares problems, the reconstruction problem
reduces to solving a single sparse linear least-squares problem. We also show that this problem can be solved quickly using a state-ofthe-
art sparse-matrix factorization algorithm. We show how to select the anchor vertices to define a compact effective basis from which
an approximated shape can be reconstructed. Furthermore, we develop an incremental update of the factorization of the least-squares
system. This allows a progressive scheme where an initial approximation is incrementally refined by a stream of anchor points. We
show that the incremental update and solving the factored system are fast enough to allow an online refinement of the mesh geometry.
Keywords :
Shape approximation , Basis , linear least-squares. , mesh Laplacian
Journal title :
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VISUALIZATION AND COMPUTER GRAPHICS
Journal title :
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VISUALIZATION AND COMPUTER GRAPHICS