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Item A Multifragment Renderer for Material Aging Visualization(The Eurographics Association, 2018) Adamopoulos, Georgios; Moutafidou, Anastasia; Drosou, Anastasios; Tzovaras, Dimitrios; Fudos, Ioannis; Jain, Eakta and Kosinka, JiríPeople involved in curatorial work and in preservation/conservation tasks need to understand exactly the nature of aging and to prevent it with minimal preservation work. In this scenario, it is of extreme importance to have tools to produce and visualize digital representations and models of visual surface appearance and material properties, to help the scientist understand how they evolve over time and under particular environmental conditions. We report on the development of a multifragment renderer for visualizing and combining the results of simulated aging of artwork objects. Several natural aging processes manifest themselves through change of color, fading, deformations or cracks. Furthermore, changes in the materials underneath the visible layers may be detected or simulated.Item A Survey on Video-based Graphics and Video Visualization(The Eurographics Association, 2011) Borgo, Rita; Chen, Min; Daubney, Ben; Grundy, Edward; Heidemann, Gunther; Höferlin, Benjamin; Höferlin, Markus; Jänicke, Heike; Weiskopf, Daniel; Xie, Xianghua; N. John and B. WyvillIn recent years, a collection of new techniques which deal with video as input data, emerged in computer graphics and visualization. In this survey, we report the state of the art in video-based graphics and video visualization. We provide a comprehensive review of techniques for making photo-realistic or artistic computer-generated imagery from videos, as well as methods for creating summary and/or abstract visual representations to reveal important features and events in videos. We propose a new taxonomy to categorize the concepts and techniques in this newlyemerged body of knowledge. To support this review, we also give a concise overview of the major advances in automated video analysis, as some techniques in this field (e.g., feature extraction, detection, tracking and so on) have been featured in video-based modeling and rendering pipelines for graphics and visualization.Item Automatic Portrait Segmentation for Image Stylization(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2016) Shen, Xiaoyong; Hertzmann, Aaron; Jia, Jiaya; Paris, Sylvain; Price, Brian; Shechtman, Eli; Sachs, Ian; Joaquim Jorge and Ming LinPortraiture is a major art form in both photography and painting. In most instances, artists seek to make the subject stand out from its surrounding, for instance, by making it brighter or sharper. In the digital world, similar effects can be achieved by processing a portrait image with photographic or painterly filters that adapt to the semantics of the image. While many successful user-guided methods exist to delineate the subject, fully automatic techniques are lacking and yield unsatisfactory results. Our paper first addresses this problem by introducing a new automatic segmentation algorithm dedicated to portraits. We then build upon this result and describe several portrait filters that exploit our automatic segmentation algorithm to generate high-quality portraits.Item EUROGRAPHICS 2017: Dirk Bartz Prize Frontmatter(Eurographics Association, 2017) Bruckner, Stefan; Ropinski, Timo;Item Example-based Interpolation and Synthesis of Bidirectional Texture Functions(The Eurographics Association and Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 2013) Ruiters, Roland; Schwartz, Christopher; Klein, Reinhard; I. Navazo, P. PoulinBidirectional Texture Functions (BTF) have proven to be a well-suited representation for the reproduction of measured real-world surface appearance and provide a high degree of realism. We present an approach for designing novel materials by interpolating between several measured BTFs. For this purpose, we transfer concepts from existing texture interpolation methods to the much more complex case of material interpolation. We employ a separation of the BTF into a heightmap and a parallax compensated BTF to cope with problems induced by parallax, masking and shadowing within the material. By working only on the factorized representation of the parallax compensated BTF and the heightmap, it is possible to efficiently perform the material interpolation. By this novel method to mix existing BTFs, we are able to design plausible and realistic intermediate materials for a large range of different opaque material classes. Furthermore, it allows for the synthesis of tileable and seamless BTFs and finally even the generation of gradually changing materials following user specified material distribution maps.Item Geometry and Attribute Compression for Voxel Scenes(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2016) Dado, Bas; Kol, Timothy R.; Bauszat, Pablo; Thiery, Jean-Marc; Eisemann, Elmar; Joaquim Jorge and Ming LinVoxel-based approaches are today's standard to encode volume data. Recently, directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) were successfully used for compressing sparse voxel scenes as well, but they are restricted to a single bit of (geometry) information per voxel. We present a method to compress arbitrary data, such as colors, normals, or reflectance information. By decoupling geometry and voxel data via a novel mapping scheme, we are able to apply the DAG principle to encode the topology, while using a palette-based compression for the voxel attributes, leading to a drastic memory reduction. Our method outperforms existing state-of-the-art techniques and is well-suited for GPU architectures. We achieve real-time performance on commodity hardware for colored scenes with up to 17 hierarchical levels (a 128K3 voxel resolution), which are stored fully in core.Item PhD Education Through Apprenticeship(The Eurographics Association, 2011) Patel, Daniel; Gröller, M. Eduard; Bruckner, Stefan; S. Maddock and J. JorgeWe describe and analyze the PhD education in the visualization group at the Vienna University of Technology and set the education in a larger perspective. Four central mechanisms drive the PhD education in Vienna. They are: to require an article-based PhD; to give the student freedom to choose research direction; to let students work in shared offices towards joint deadlines; and to involve students in reviewing articles. This paper describes these mechanisms in detail and illustrates their effect.Item A Preliminary Analysis of Methods for Curvature Estimation on Surfaces With Local Reliefs(The Eurographics Association, 2019) Moscoso Thompson, Elia; Biasotti, Silvia; Cignoni, Paolo and Miguel, EderCurvature estimation is very popular in geometry processing for the analysis of local surface variations. Despite the large number of methods, no quantitative nor qualitative studies have been conducted for a comparative analysis of the different algorithms on surfaces with small geometric variations, such as chiselled or relief surfaces. In this work we compare eight curvature estimation methods that are commonly adopted by the computer graphics community on a number of triangle meshes derived from scans of surfaces with local reliefs.Item Dynamic 2D/3D Registration(The Eurographics Association, 2014) Bouaziz, Sofien; Tagliasacchi, Andrea; Pauly, Mark; Nicolas Holzschuch and Karol MyszkowskiImage and geometry registration algorithms are an essential component of many computer graphics and computer vision systems. With recent technological advances in RGB-D sensors, such as the Microsoft Kinect or Asus Xtion Live, robust algorithms that combine 2D image and 3D geometry registration have become an active area of research. The goal of this course is to introduce the basics of 2D/3D registration algorithms and to provide theoretical explanations and practical tools to design computer vision and computer graphics systems based on RGB-D devices. To illustrate the theory and demonstrate practical relevance, we briefly discuss three applications: rigid scanning, non-rigid modeling, and realtime face tracking. Our course targets researchers and computer graphics practitioners with a background in computer graphics and/or computer vision. An up-to-date version of the course notes as well as slides and source code can be found at http://lgg.epfl.ch/2d3dRegistration.Item Recent Advances in Adaptive Sampling and Reconstruction for Monte Carlo Rendering(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2015) Zwicker, Matthias; Jarosz, Wojciech; Lehtinen, Jaakko; Moon, Bochang; Ramamoorthi, Ravi; Rousselle, Fabrice; Sen, Pradeep; Soler, Cyril; Yoon, Sungeui E.; K. Hormann and O. StaadtMonte Carlo integration is firmly established as the basis for most practical realistic image synthesis algorithms because of its flexibility and generality. However, the visual quality of rendered images often suffers from estimator variance, which appears as visually distracting noise. Adaptive sampling and reconstruction algorithms reduce variance by controlling the sampling density and aggregating samples in a reconstruction step, possibly over large image regions. In this paper we survey recent advances in this area. We distinguish between “a priori” methods that analyze the light transport equations and derive sampling rates and reconstruction filters from this analysis, and “a posteriori” methods that apply statistical techniques to sets of samples to drive the adaptive sampling and reconstruction process. They typically estimate the errors of several reconstruction filters, and select the best filter locally to minimize error. We discuss advantages and disadvantages of recent state-of-the-art techniques, and provide visual and quantitative comparisons. Some of these techniques are proving useful in real-world applications, and we aim to provide an overview for practitioners and researchers to assess these approaches. In addition, we discuss directions for potential further improvements.