Real-Time Nonlinear Shape Interpolation
Author(s) -
Christoph Von-Tycowicz,
Christian Schulz,
HansPeter Seidel,
Klaus Hildebrandt
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
acm transactions on graphics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.153
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1557-7368
pISSN - 0730-0301
DOI - 10.1145/2729972
Subject(s) - interpolation (computer graphics) , subspace topology , mathematics , hessian matrix , nonlinear system , algorithm , sequence (biology) , mathematical optimization , shape optimization , bilinear interpolation , computer science , mathematical analysis , artificial intelligence , finite element method , image (mathematics) , statistics , physics , quantum mechanics , biology , genetics , thermodynamics
We introduce a scheme for real-time nonlinear interpolation of a set of shapes. The scheme exploits the structure of the shape interpolation problem, in particular the fact that the set of all possible interpolated shapes is a low-dimensional object in a high-dimensional shape space. The interpolated shapes are defined as the minimizers of a nonlinear objective functional on the shape space. Our approach is to construct a reduced optimization problem that approximates its unreduced counterpart and can be solved in milliseconds. To achieve this, we restrict the optimization to a low-dimensional subspace that is specifically designed for the shape interpolation problem. The construction of the subspace is based on two components: a formula for the calculation of derivatives of the interpolated shapes and a Krylov-type sequence that combines the derivatives and the Hessian of the objective functional. To make the computational cost for solving the reduced optimization problem independent of the resolution of the example shapes, we combine the dimensional reduction with schemes for the efficient approximation of the reduced nonlinear objective functional and its gradient. In our experiments, we obtain rates of 20--100 interpolated shapes per second, even for the largest examples which have 500k vertices per example shape.
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