All tag results for ‘NPR’

Depth-Dependent Halos: Illustrative Rendering of Dense Line Data

Authors
Maarten H. Everts
Henk Bekker
Jos B.T.M. Roerdink
Tobias Isenberg

DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/TVCG.2009.138

Abstract
We present a technique for the illustrative rendering of 3D line data at interactive frame rates. We create depth-dependent halos around lines to emphasize tight line bundles while less structured lines are de-emphasized. Moreover, the depth-dependent halos combined with depth cueing via line width attenuation increase depth perception, extending techniques from sparse line rendering to the illustrative visualization of dense line data. We demonstrate how the technique can be used, in particular, for illustrating DTI fiber tracts but also show examples from gas and fluid flow simulations and mathematics as well as describe how the technique extends to point data. We report on an informal evaluation of the illustrative DTI fiber tract visualizations with domain experts in neurosurgery and tractography who commented positively about the results and suggested a number of directions for future work.

Multi-Scale Surface Descriptors

Authors
Gregory Cipriano
George N. Phillips Jr.
Michael Gleicher

DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/TVCG.2009.168

Download
Slides

Abstract
Local shape descriptors compactly characterize regions of a surface, and have been applied to tasks in visualization, shape matching, and analysis. Classically, curvature has be used as a shape descriptor; however, this differential property characterizes only an infinitesimal neighborhood. In this paper, we provide shape descriptors for surface meshes designed to be multi-scale, that is, capable of characterizing regions of varying size. These descriptors capture statistically the shape of a neighborhood around a central point by fitting a quadratic surface. They therefore mimic differential curvature, are efficient to compute, and encode anisotropy. We show how simple variants of mesh operations can be used to compute the descriptors without resorting to expensive parameterizations, and additionally provide a statistical approximation for reduced computational cost. We show how these descriptors apply to a number of uses in visualization, analysis, and matching of surfaces, particularly to tasks in protein surface analysis.

  • 1 + black-and-white rendering
  • 1 + Curvature
  • 1 + dense line data
  • 1 + descriptors
  • 1 + DTI
  • 1 + GPU technique
  • 1 + Illustrative rendering and visualization
  • 1 + shape matching
  • 1 + stylized rendering
    •