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Research Seminar - December 03, 1999
Seminar Announcement
| Title: |
Calculation of features for 3D Surfaces
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| Speaker: |
Reinhard Klette |
| |
University of Auckland |
| Date: |
Friday 3rd December, 1999 |
| Time: |
3pm |
| Venue: |
Seminar Room 1.24 |
Abstract
Criteria for surface approximation are: multigrid convergence
towards the true surface (Hausdorff metric) or towards the
true surface contents, support for feature calculations based
on the approximated surface (ie. polyhedral approximations
support the use of algorithms known in computational geometry),
time/space efficiency, robustness etc.
The talk consists of two parts:
A review of local surface fitting techniques with respect
to surface area measurement and volume data segmentation
(confocal microscopy of chondrons) illustrates the need
in developing techniques for convergent surface area
measurement. Marching cubes, opaque cubes, marching
tetrahedra etc. are local techniques which are not
convergent with respect to the surface area measurement
problem. Volume data segmentation techniques based on
such local isosurface approaches contribute to analysis
errors.
The second part informs about the recent
situation in surface approximation based on two-dimensional
grid continua. There are algorithmic solutions for
calculating the length of one-dimensional grid continua
in 2D or 3D space. But so far there is no algorithmic
solution known for calculating a minimum-area
polyhedral surface complete and contained in a
closed two-dimensional grid continuum.
Global approximations via linear surface patches
might be an easier to solve problem, but there are
no convergence theorems known for this approach.
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