Browsing DH2013 - Track 1 by Title
Now showing items 31-36 of 36
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Realistic Virtual Reproductions. Image-based modelling of geometry and appearance
(The Eurographics Association, 2013)Existing technologies for contact-less 3D scanning and Image Based Modelling (IBM) methods are being extensively used nowadays to digitize cultural heritage elements. With a convenient degree of automation these methods ... -
Replicating perishable artefacts. A project for analysis and exhibition of Early Medieval objects from the Byzantine village at Scorpo (Supersano, Italy)
(The Eurographics Association, 2013)Artefacts found in an archaeological excavation are sometimes made of perishable or fragile material like wood, iron, or leather. These present obvious conservation problems. This is the case of various artefacts from the ... -
Reverse Engineering of Scale Models Using Dataflow Programming: Application to the fortification of plans-reliefs
(The Eurographics Association, 2013)Despite the progress in three-dimensional scanning, some architectural artifacts remain a digitizing challenge. Scale models and more especially the plans-reliefs of Louis XIV of France have specific characteristics such ... -
Surface Light Field from Video Acquired in Uncontrolled Settings
(The Eurographics Association, 2013)This paper presents an algorithm for the estimation of the Surface Light Field using video sequences acquired moving the camera around the object. Unlike other state of the art methods, it does not require a uniform sampling ... -
Temporal Terrestrial Laser Scanning to Visualize the Archaeological Excavation Process
(The Eurographics Association, 2013)Archaeology is a destructive science. Photographs and videos preserve some aspects of the sequence of events inherent within the archaeological excavation process, but cannot replicate the spatiality and detail of the ... -
Underwater photogrammetry for archaeology and marine biology.40 years of experience in Marseille, France
(The Eurographics Association, 2013)Since 1973 archeology and computer science have developed close ties in Marseille. Two departments (computer science and archaeology) from the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) in Marseille started ...