1 / 52

Hierarchyless Simplification, Stripification and Compression of Triangulated Two-Manifolds

Hierarchyless Simplification, Stripification and Compression of Triangulated Two-Manifolds Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez M. Gopi Renato Pajarola University of California, Irvine Introduction

paul
Télécharger la présentation

Hierarchyless Simplification, Stripification and Compression of Triangulated Two-Manifolds

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hierarchyless Simplification, Stripification and Compression of Triangulated Two-Manifolds Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez M. Gopi Renato Pajarola University of California, Irvine

  2. Introduction • Intersection of and relationship between three mesh problems: Simplification, stripification and connectivity compression • Each problem must be constrained • Imposed constraints allow further applicability http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  3. Introduction: Three problems • Simplification • Decimation • Vertex clustering • Edge collapsing • Compression • Valence-driven • Strip/edge-graph based • Stripification • Alternating linear strips • Generalized strip loops http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  4. Talk outline • Hierarchyless simplification • Simplification and stripification • Connectivity compression • Results • Conclusion http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  5. Mesh simplification • Popular approach: Edge collapse/vertex split • Problem: Dependencies between collapsed edges • Hierarchy of collapse/split operations Edge collapse Vertex split http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  6. Edge-collapse dependencies Edge-collapse A can’t be split before Edge-collapse B A B http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  7. Multi-edges Definition • Multi-edge: Edge representing multiple edges from the original mesh, after simplification. Edge collapse Vertex split http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  8. Edge-collapse dependencies A Multi-edges B Collapsing multi-edges produces dependencies http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  9. Multi-edges Avoiding dependencies • When one edge of a triangle is collapsed, the other two become multi-edges. • If we don’t collapse multi-edges: Only one edge per triangle is collapsed Edge collapse 6 5 6 5 1 Collapsing edge 1 9 9 7/8 7 8 4 4 2 2 3 3 http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  10. Hierarchyless simplification • Each triangle has at most one collapsible edge • One collapsible partner across that edge • Problem: Choosing one edge prevents others from collapsing • Optimize choice of collapsible edges http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  11. Hierarchyless simplification • Pose as graph problem in the dual graph of the triangle mesh • Choose collapsible edges • Graph matching • Maximal set of collapsible edges (triangle pairs) • Perfect graph matching • No multi-edges collapsed!! • (No collapsing dependencies) http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  12. Simplification example • Genus 0 manifold • 3 connected sets • Of collapsible edges http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  13. Simplification example Multi-edges http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  14. Simplification example http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  15. Simplification example http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  16. Simplification example http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  17. Simplification example http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  18. Simplification example Equivalent vertices http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  19. Simplification example http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  20. Simplification example Equivalent vertices http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  21. Simplification example http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  22. Simplification example • 3 connected components of collapsible edges • 3 vertices after complete simplification http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  23. Extremal simplification • All triangles collapsed • But not all vertices collapsed • Collapsible edges organized in connected components • Each connected component collapses to 1 vertex http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  24. Extremal simplification • Goal: Reduce number of vertices in final model • By reducing number of connected components of collapsible edges • Apply two operations: • Edge swap (next slide) • Matching reassignment • Minimum 1 or 2 connected components • In general, connected components are trees • Might have loops http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  25. Extremal simplificationConnecting collapsible edges Initially, 3 connected components of collapsible edges Choose an edge to swap Only two connected components now http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  26. Extremal simplification • 2 connected components of collapsible edges • 2 vertices after complete simplification http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  27. Talk outline • Hierarchyless simplification • Simplification and stripification • Connectivity compression • Results • Conclusion http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  28. Simplification and stripification • Each triangle has one collapsible edge • The other two connect it to a triangle strip loop • Removing collapsible edges creates disjoint triangle strip loops http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  29. Extremal simplification andsingle-stripification • Connected components of collapsible edges are trees • Triangles around them form loops • Fewer collapsible edge components → fewer loops: • Reduce number of connected components of matched edges. • In manifolds, collapsible edges can be grouped in 1 or 2 connected components: • All triangulated manifolds can be made a single triangle strip loop. Schematic representation of triangle strips and medial axes. http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  30. Maintaining strips during simplification • Hierarchyless simplification automatically maintains triangle strips • Edge-collapses shorten strips and medial axes • But don’t change topology • Let’s see an example… http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  31. Maintaining strips during simplification http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  32. Maintaining strips during simplification http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  33. Maintaining strips during simplification http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  34. Maintaining strips during simplification http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  35. Maintaining strips during simplification http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  36. Quality considerations • Quality of simplification • Choose collapsible edges with the least quadric error • Quality of stripification • Application dependent (i.e. maximize strip locality) • Assign edge weights • Choose weight minimizingset of collapsible edges • Diaz-Gutierrez et al. "Constrained strip generation and management for efficient interactive 3D rendering“, CGI 2005 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  37. Talk outline • Hierarchyless simplification • Simplification and stripification • Connectivity compression • Results • Conclusion http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  38. Collapsible edges & connectivity compression • Important: topological, not geometric compression. • Some existing techniques produce triangle strips as byproduct of compression. • A few compress connectivity along with strips. • We exploit duality of strips and medial axes. Images from http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/~jarek/ http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  39. 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 Encoding of a strip as a zipping of two trees “Hand and Glove” compression Genus-0 triangulated manifolds • Encode genus 0 mesh as: • Two vertex spanning trees of collapsible edges (“hand and glove” trees) • A bit string zips the trees together along the single strip loop • Guaranteed upper bound: 2 bits/face (i.e. 4 bits/vertex) http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  40. “Hand and Glove” compression Genus-0 triangulated manifolds • Predict direction of strip to improve compression • Slight modifications to handle: • Higher genus • Boundaries • Quadrilateral manifolds • Etc. • Very simple to code • One day for prototype program http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  41. Talk outline • Hierarchyless simplification • Simplification and stripification • Connectivity compression • Results • Conclusion http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  42. Results: Simplification Models with 1358, 454, 54 and 4 triangles. http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  43. Results: Simplification Models with 19778, 7238, 1500 and 778 triangles. Models with 16450, 6450, 2450 and 450triangles. http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  44. Results: Simplification Models with 101924, 33924, 9924 and 1924 triangles. http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  45. Results: View-dependent simplification Notice dramatic change in simplification http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  46. Results: Stripificationwith asymmetric simplification http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  47. Results: Compression bit ratios Bits per vertex obtained with Hand & Glove method. Comparison with Edgebreaker. The output of both methods is compressed with an arithmetic encoder. http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  48. Talk outline • Hierarchyless simplification • Simplification and stripification • Connectivity compression • Results • Conclusion http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  49. Summary and conclusion • This paper lays a theoretical foundation for combining three important areas of geometric computing. • By computing and appropriately managing sets of collapsible edges, we achieved: • Hierarchyless mesh simplification • Dynamic management of triangle strip loops • Efficient connectivity compression http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

  50. Future work • Explore and improve Hand & Glove mesh compression. • Design a lighter data structure for computing errors in view-dependent simplification. • Extend current results on stripification (partially completed). http://graphics.ics.uci.edu

More Related