Separatrix Persistence: Extraction of Salient Edges on Surfaces Using Topological Methods
Tino Weinkauf, David Günther
Eurographics Symposium on Geometry Processing, 2009, pp. 1519--1528.
Abstract: Salient edges are perceptually prominent features of a surface. Most previous extraction schemes utilize the notion of ridges and valleys for their detection, thereby requiring curvature derivatives which are rather sensitive to noise. We introduce a novel method for salient edge extraction which does not depend on curvature derivatives. It is based on a topological analysis of the principal curvatures and salient edges of the surface are identified as parts of separatrices of the topological skeleton. Previous topological approaches obtain results including non-salient edges due to inherent properties of the underlying algorithms. We extend the profound theory by introducing the novel concept of separatrix persistence, which is a smooth measure along a separatrix and allows to keep its most salient parts only. We compare our results with other methods for salient edge extraction.
Article URL: http://diglib.eg.org/EG/CGF/volume28/issue5/v28i5pp1519-1528.pdf
BibTeX format:
@inproceedings{Weinkauf:2009:SPE,
  author = {Tino Weinkauf and David Günther},
  title = {Separatrix Persistence: Extraction of Salient Edges on Surfaces Using Topological Methods},
  booktitle = {Eurographics Symposium on Geometry Processing},
  pages = {1519--1528},
  year = {2009},
}
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