The Aesthetics of Rapidly-Exploring Random Trees

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Date
2013
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
ACM
Abstract
Rapidly-Exploring Random Trees (RRTs) have been introduced as an algorithmic concept for the rapid exploration of configuration spaces targeting fast path planning, mainly applied in the field of robotics. Typically, such structured space organizations are only used on an algorithmic level but not for direct visual representation. In this paper, we illustrate the aesthetics of such RRTs by displaying them in a visual form that serves as a basis to generate algorithmic art. Apart from the visual encoding of such space-filling node-link diagrams, we demonstrate how these trees grow in the configuration space for RRT layouts with and without incremental distances from the initial point. Additionally, RRTs can be visually enhanced by several inherent tree metrics such as tree depth, subtree size, and branching factors to make the diagrams more aesthetically appealing and readable. We provide examples of different tree sizes and illustrate the effect of changes to several control parameters such as color coding, line segment thickness, layouts, and shape constraints.
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@inproceedings{
10.1145:2487276.2487285
, booktitle = {
Computational Aesthetics in Graphics, Visualization, and Imaging
}, editor = {
Donald House and Cindy Grimm
}, title = {{
The Aesthetics of Rapidly-Exploring Random Trees
}}, author = {
Burch, Michael
 and
Weiskopf, Daniel
}, year = {
2013
}, publisher = {
ACM
}, ISSN = {
1816-0859
}, ISBN = {
978-1-4503-2203-4
}, DOI = {
10.1145/2487276.2487285
} }
Citation