Stylization and Abstraction of Photographs
Doug DeCarlo, Anthony Santella
In ACM Transactions on Graphics, 21(3), July 2002.
Abstract: Good information design depends on clarifying the meaningful structure in an image. We describe a computational approach to stylizing and abstracting photographs that explicitly responds to this design goal. Our system transforms images into a line-drawing style using bold edges and large regions of constant color. To do this, it represents images as a hierarchical structure of parts and boundaries computed using state-of-the-art computer vision. Our system identifies the meaningful elements of this structure using a model of human perception and a record of a user's eye movements in looking at the photo; the system renders a new image using transformations that preserve and highlight these visual elements. Our method thus represents a new alternative for non-photorealistic rendering both in its visual style, in its approach to visual form, and in its techniques for interaction.
Keyword(s): non-photorealistic rendering, visual perception, eyetracking, image simplification
@article{DeCarlo:2002:SAA,
author = {Doug DeCarlo and Anthony Santella},
title = {Stylization and Abstraction of Photographs},
journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics},
volume = {21},
number = {3},
pages = {769--776},
month = jul,
year = {2002},
}
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