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Marco Callieri

Researcher at Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell'Informazione

Publications -  113
Citations -  4550

Marco Callieri is an academic researcher from Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell'Informazione. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visualization & Rendering (computer graphics). The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 109 publications receiving 3840 citations. Previous affiliations of Marco Callieri include National Research Council.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

MeshLab: an Open-Source Mesh Processing Tool

TL;DR: The architecture of MeshLab, an open source, extensible, mesh processing system that has been developed at the Visual Computing Lab of the ISTI-CNR with the helps of tens of students is described.
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3DHOP: 3D Heritage Online Presenter

TL;DR: The capabilities and characteristics of the 3DHOP framework are presented, using different examples based on concrete projects, to demonstrate the power and flexibility of the framework.
Journal ArticleDOI

Technical Section: Masked photo blending: Mapping dense photographic data set on high-resolution sampled 3D models

TL;DR: This paper presents an approach where a multivariate blending function weights all the available pixel data with respect to geometric, topological and colorimetric criteria and selectively mapped on the geometry to make profitable use of all the data available and to avoid the texture size bottleneck.
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Archeological excavation monitoring using dense stereo matching techniques

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the use of automatic dense stereo reconstruction tools for the monitoring of an excavation site and presented a methodology for the effective acquisition and processing of data, which demonstrated the repeatability of the data acquisition process, which is a key factor when qualitative analysis is performed.
Journal ArticleDOI

3D Models for Cultural Heritage: Beyond Plain Visualization

TL;DR: Digital technologies are transforming the way cultural heritage researchers, archaeologists, and curators work by providing new ways to collaborate, record excavations, and restore artifacts as mentioned in this paper, and they can be used for collaborative, collaborative, and restoration of artifacts.