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Four‐Dimensional Geometry Lens: A Novel Volumetric Magnification Approach
Author(s) -
Li Bo,
Zhao Xin,
Qin Hong
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
computer graphics forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.578
H-Index - 120
eISSN - 1467-8659
pISSN - 0167-7055
DOI - 10.1111/cgf.12166
Subject(s) - computer science , magnification , distortion (music) , geometry processing , polygon mesh , lens (geology) , geometry , robustness (evolution) , computer vision , context (archaeology) , dimension (graph theory) , artificial intelligence , algorithm , computer graphics (images) , mathematics , optics , physics , computer network , amplifier , biochemistry , chemistry , paleontology , bandwidth (computing) , biology , pure mathematics , gene
We present a novel methodology that utilizes four‐dimensional (4D) space deformation to simulate a magnification lens on versatile volume datasets and textured solid models. Compared with other magnification methods (e.g. geometric optics, mesh editing), 4D differential geometry theory and its practices are much more flexible and powerful for preserving shape features (i.e. minimizing angle distortion), and easier to adapt to versatile solid models. The primary advantage of 4D space lies at the following fact: we can now easily magnify the volume of regions of interest (ROIs) from the additional dimension, while keeping the rest region unchanged. To achieve this primary goal, we first embed a 3D volumetric input into 4D space and magnify ROIs in the fourth dimension. Then we flatten the 4D shape back into 3D space to accommodate other typical applications in the real 3D world. In order to enforce distortion minimization, in both steps we devise the high‐dimensional geometry techniques based on rigorous 4D geometry theory for 3D/4D mapping back and forth to amend the distortion. Our system can preserve not only focus region, but also context region and global shape. We demonstrate the effectiveness, robustness and efficacy of our framework with a variety of models ranging from tetrahedral meshes to volume datasets.