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Conference

Symposium on Geometry Processing 

About: Symposium on Geometry Processing is an academic conference. The conference publishes majorly in the area(s): Polygon mesh & Point cloud. Over the lifetime, 365 publications have been published by the conference receiving 30859 citations.


Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
26 Jun 2006
TL;DR: A spatially adaptive multiscale algorithm whose time and space complexities are proportional to the size of the reconstructed model, and which reduces to a well conditioned sparse linear system.
Abstract: We show that surface reconstruction from oriented points can be cast as a spatial Poisson problem. This Poisson formulation considers all the points at once, without resorting to heuristic spatial partitioning or blending, and is therefore highly resilient to data noise. Unlike radial basis function schemes, our Poisson approach allows a hierarchy of locally supported basis functions, and therefore the solution reduces to a well conditioned sparse linear system. We describe a spatially adaptive multiscale algorithm whose time and space complexities are proportional to the size of the reconstructed model. Experimenting with publicly available scan data, we demonstrate reconstruction of surfaces with greater detail than previously achievable.

2,712 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Jul 2009
TL;DR: The Heat Kernel Signature, called the HKS, is obtained by restricting the well‐known heat kernel to the temporal domain and shows that under certain mild assumptions, HKS captures all of the information contained in the heat kernel, and characterizes the shape up to isometry.
Abstract: We propose a novel point signature based on the properties of the heat diffusion process on a shape. Our signature, called the Heat Kernel Signature (or HKS), is obtained by restricting the well-known heat kernel to the temporal domain. Remarkably we show that under certain mild assumptions, HKS captures all of the information contained in the heat kernel, and characterizes the shape up to isometry. This means that the restriction to the temporal domain, on the one hand, makes HKS much more concise and easily commensurable, while on the other hand, it preserves all of the information about the intrinsic geometry of the shape. In addition, HKS inherits many useful properties from the heat kernel, which means, in particular, that it is stable under perturbations of the shape. Our signature also provides a natural and efficiently computable multi-scale way to capture information about neighborhoods of a given point, which can be extremely useful in many applications. To demonstrate the practical relevance of our signature, we present several methods for non-rigid multi-scale matching based on the HKS and use it to detect repeated structure within the same shape and across a collection of shapes.

1,546 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
23 Jun 2003
TL;DR: The limitations of canonical alignment are described and an alternate method, based on spherical harmonics, for obtaining rotation invariant representations is discussed, which reduces the dimensionality of the descriptor, providing a more compact representation, which in turn makes comparing two models more efficient.
Abstract: One of the challenges in 3D shape matching arises from the fact that in many applications, models should be considered to be the same if they differ by a rotation. Consequently, when comparing two models, a similarity metric implicitly provides the measure of similarity at the optimal alignment. Explicitly solving for the optimal alignment is usually impractical. So, two general methods have been proposed for addressing this issue: (1) Every model is represented using rotation invariant descriptors. (2) Every model is described by a rotation dependent descriptor that is aligned into a canonical coordinate system defined by the model. In this paper, we describe the limitations of canonical alignment and discuss an alternate method, based on spherical harmonics, for obtaining rotation invariant representations. We describe the properties of this tool and show how it can be applied to a number of existing, orientation dependent descriptors to improve their matching performance. The advantages of this tool are two-fold: First, it improves the matching performance of many descriptors. Second, it reduces the dimensionality of the descriptor, providing a more compact representation, which in turn makes comparing two models more efficient.

1,424 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
08 Jul 2004
TL;DR: In this paper, the Laplacian of the mesh is enhanced to be invariant to locally linearized rigid transformations and scaling, which can be used to perform surface editing at interactive rates.
Abstract: Surface editing operations commonly require geometric details of the surface to be preserved as much as possible. We argue that geometric detail is an intrinsic property of a surface and that, consequently, surface editing is best performed by operating over an intrinsic surface representation. We provide such a representation of a surface, based on the Laplacian of the mesh, by encoding each vertex relative to its neighborhood. The Laplacian of the mesh is enhanced to be invariant to locally linearized rigid transformations and scaling. Based on this Laplacian representation, we develop useful editing operations: interactive free-form deformation in a region of interest based on the transformation of a handle, transfer and mixing of geometric details between two surfaces, and transplanting of a partial surface mesh onto another surface. The main computation involved in all operations is the solution of a sparse linear system, which can be done at interactive rates. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach in several examples, showing that the editing operations change the shape while respecting the structural geometric detail.

1,143 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
04 Jul 2007
TL;DR: This work argues that defining a modeling operation by asking for rigidity of the local transformations is useful in various settings, and devise a simple iterative mesh editing scheme based on this principle, that leads to detail-preserving and intuitive deformations.
Abstract: Modeling tasks, such as surface deformation and editing, can be analyzed by observing the local behavior of the surface. We argue that defining a modeling operation by asking for rigidity of the local transformations is useful in various settings. Such formulation leads to a non-linear, yet conceptually simple energy formulation, which is to be minimized by the deformed surface under particular modeling constraints. We devise a simple iterative mesh editing scheme based on this principle, that leads to detail-preserving and intuitive deformations. Our algorithm is effective and notably easy to implement, making it attractive for practical modeling applications.

1,028 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Conference in previous years
YearPapers
20213
20201
20192
201836
20175
201626