Edge-Sharpener: Recovering sharp features in triangulations of non-adaptively re-meshed surfaces
Marco Attene, Bianca Falcidieno, Jarek Rossignac, Michela Spagnuolo
Eurographics Symposium on Geometry Processing, 2003, pp. 62--71.
Abstract: 3D scanners, iso-surface extraction procedures, and several recent geometric compression schemes sample surfaces of 3D shapes in a regular fashion, without any attempt to align the samples with the sharp edges and corners of the original shape. Consequently, the interpolating triangle meshes chamfer these sharp features and thus exhibit significant errors. The new Edge-Sharpener filter introduced here identifies the chamfer edges and subdivides them and their incident triangles by inserting new vertices and by forcing these vertices to lie on intersections of planes that locally approximate the smooth surfaces that meet at these sharp features. This post-processing significantly reduces the error produced by the initial sampling process. For example, we have observed that the L2 error introduced by the SwingWrapper9 remeshing-based compressor can be reduced down to a fifth by executing Edge-Sharpener after decompression, with no additional information.
Article URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.2312/SGP/SGP03/062-071
BibTeX format:
@inproceedings{Attene:2003:ERS,
  author = {Marco Attene and Bianca Falcidieno and Jarek Rossignac and Michela Spagnuolo},
  title = {Edge-Sharpener: Recovering sharp features in triangulations of non-adaptively re-meshed surfaces},
  booktitle = {Eurographics Symposium on Geometry Processing},
  pages = {62--71},
  year = {2003},
}
Search for more articles by Marco Attene.
Search for more articles by Bianca Falcidieno.
Search for more articles by Jarek Rossignac.
Search for more articles by Michela Spagnuolo.

Return to the search page.


graphbib: Powered by "bibsql" and "SQLite3."