42-Issue 2
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Item CubeGAN: Omnidirectional Image Synthesis Using Generative Adversarial Networks(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) May, Christopher; Aliaga, Daniel; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasWe propose a framework to create projectively-correct and seam-free cube-map images using generative adversarial learning. Deep generation of cube-maps that contain the correct projection of the environment onto its faces is not straightforward as has been recognized in prior work. Our approach extends an existing framework, StyleGAN3, to produce cube-maps instead of planar images. In addition to reshaping the output, we include a cube-specific volumetric initialization component, a projective resampling component, and a modification of augmentation operations to the spherical domain. Our results demonstrate the network's generation capabilities trained on imagery from various 3D environments. Additionally, we show the power and quality of our GAN design in an inversion task, combined with navigation capabilities, to perform novel view synthesis.Item A Variational Loop Shrinking Analogy for Handle and Tunnel Detection and Reeb Graph Construction on Surfaces(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Weinrauch, Alexander; Mlakar, Daniel; Seidel, Hans-Peter; Steinberger, Markus; Zayer, Rhaleb; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasThe humble loop shrinking property played a central role in the inception of modern topology but it has been eclipsed by more abstract algebraic formalisms. This is particularly true in the context of detecting relevant non-contractible loops on surfaces where elaborate homological and/or graph theoretical constructs are favored in algorithmic solutions. In this work, we devise a variational analogy to the loop shrinking property and show that it yields a simple, intuitive, yet powerful solution allowing a streamlined treatment of the problem of handle and tunnel loop detection. Our formalization tracks the evolution of a diffusion front randomly initiated on a single location on the surface. Capitalizing on a diffuse interface representation combined with a set of rules for concurrent front interactions, we develop a dynamic data structure for tracking the evolution on the surface encoded as a sparse matrix which serves for performing both diffusion numerics and loop detection and acts as the workhorse of our fully parallel implementation. The substantiated results suggest our approach outperforms state of the art and robustly copes with highly detailed geometric models. As a byproduct, our approach can be used to construct Reeb graphs by diffusion thus avoiding commonly encountered issues when using Morse functions.Item Img2Logo: Generating Golden Ratio Logos from Images(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Hsiao, Kai-Wen; Yang, Yong-Liang; Chiu, Yung-Chih; Hu, Min-Chun; Yao, Chih-Yuan; Chu, Hung-Kuo; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasLogos are one of the most important graphic design forms that use an abstracted shape to clearly represent the spirit of a community. Among various styles of abstraction, a particular golden-ratio design is frequently employed by designers to create a concise and regular logo. In this context, designers utilize a set of circular arcs with golden ratios (i.e., all arcs are taken from circles whose radii form a geometric series based on the golden ratio) as the design elements to manually approximate a target shape. This error-prone process requires a large amount of time and effort, posing a significant challenge for design space exploration. In this work, we present a novel computational framework that can automatically generate golden ratio logo abstractions from an input image. Our framework is based on a set of carefully identified design principles and a constrained optimization formulation respecting these principles. We also propose a progressive approach that can efficiently solve the optimization problem, resulting in a sequence of abstractions that approximate the input at decreasing levels of detail. We evaluate our work by testing on images with different formats including real photos, clip arts, and line drawings. We also extensively validate the key components and compare our results with manual results by designers to demonstrate the effectiveness of our framework. Moreover, our framework can largely benefit design space exploration via easy specification of design parameters such as abstraction levels, golden circle sizes, etc.Item Directionality-Aware Design of Embroidery Patterns(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Zhenyuan, Liu; Piovarci, Michal; Hafner, Christian; Charrondière, RaphaĂ«l; Bickel, Bernd; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasEmbroidery is a long-standing and high-quality approach to making logos and images on textiles. Nowadays, it can also be performed via automated machines that weave threads with high spatial accuracy. A characteristic feature of the appearance of the threads is a high degree of anisotropy. The anisotropic behavior is caused by depositing thin but long strings of thread. As a result, the stitched patterns convey both color and direction. Artists leverage this anisotropic behavior to enhance pure color images with textures, illusions of motion, or depth cues. However, designing colorful embroidery patterns with prescribed directionality is a challenging task, one usually requiring an expert designer. In this work, we propose an interactive algorithm that generates machine-fabricable embroidery patterns from multi-chromatic images equipped with user-specified directionality fields.We cast the problem of finding a stitching pattern into vector theory. To find a suitable stitching pattern, we extract sources and sinks from the divergence field of the vector field extracted from the input and use them to trace streamlines. We further optimize the streamlines to guarantee a smooth and connected stitching pattern. The generated patterns approximate the color distribution constrained by the directionality field. To allow for further artistic control, the trade-off between color match and directionality match can be interactively explored via an intuitive slider. We showcase our approach by fabricating several embroidery paths.Item Surface Maps via Adaptive Triangulations(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Schmidt, Patrick; Pieper, Dörte; Kobbelt, Leif; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasWe present a new method to compute continuous and bijective maps (surface homeomorphisms) between two or more genus-0 triangle meshes. In contrast to previous approaches, we decouple the resolution at which a map is represented from the resolution of the input meshes. We discretize maps via common triangulations that approximate the input meshes while remaining in bijective correspondence to them. Both the geometry and the connectivity of these triangulations are optimized with respect to a single objective function that simultaneously controls mapping distortion, triangulation quality, and approximation error. A discrete-continuous optimization algorithm performs both energy-based remeshing as well as global second-order optimization of vertex positions, parametrized via the sphere. With this, we combine the disciplines of compatible remeshing and surface map optimization in a unified formulation and make a contribution in both fields. While existing compatible remeshing algorithms often operate on a fixed pre-computed surface map, we can now globally update this correspondence during remeshing. On the other hand, bijective surface-to-surface map optimization previously required computing costly overlay meshes that are inherently tied to the input mesh resolution. We achieve significant complexity reduction by instead assessing distortion between the approximating triangulations. This new map representation is inherently more robust than previous overlay-based approaches, is less intricate to implement, and naturally supports mapping between more than two surfaces. Moreover, it enables adaptive multi-resolution schemes that, e.g., first align corresponding surface regions at coarse resolutions before refining the map where needed. We demonstrate significant speedups and increased flexibility over state-of-the art mapping algorithms at similar map quality, and also provide a reference implementation of the method.Item Scalable and Efficient Functional Map Computations on Dense Meshes(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Magnet, Robin; Ovsjanikov, Maks; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasWe propose a new scalable version of the functional map pipeline that allows to efficiently compute correspondences between potentially very dense meshes. Unlike existing approaches that process dense meshes by relying on ad-hoc mesh simplification, we establish an integrated end-to-end pipeline with theoretical approximation analysis. In particular, our method overcomes the computational burden of both computing the basis, as well the functional and pointwise correspondence computation by approximating the functional spaces and the functional map itself. Errors in the approximations are controlled by theoretical upper bounds assessing the range of applicability of our pipeline.With this construction in hand, we propose a scalable practical algorithm and demonstrate results on dense meshes, which approximate those obtained by standard functional map algorithms at the fraction of the computation time. Moreover, our approach outperforms the standard acceleration procedures by a large margin, leading to accurate results even in challenging cases.Item Simulating Analogue Film Damage to Analyse and Improve Artefact Restoration on High-resolution Scans(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Ivanova, Daniela; Williamson, John; Henderson, Paul; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasDigital scans of analogue photographic film typically contain artefacts such as dust and scratches. Automated removal of these is an important part of preservation and dissemination of photographs of historical and cultural importance. While state-of-the-art deep learning models have shown impressive results in general image inpainting and denoising, film artefact removal is an understudied problem. It has particularly challenging requirements, due to the complex nature of analogue damage, the high resolution of film scans, and potential ambiguities in the restoration. There are no publicly available highquality datasets of real-world analogue film damage for training and evaluation, making quantitative studies impossible. We address the lack of ground-truth data for evaluation by collecting a dataset of 4K damaged analogue film scans paired with manually-restored versions produced by a human expert, allowing quantitative evaluation of restoration performance. We have made the dataset available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.21803304. We construct a larger synthetic dataset of damaged images with paired clean versions using a statistical model of artefact shape and occurrence learnt from real, heavily-damaged images. We carefully validate the realism of the simulated damage via a human perceptual study, showing that even expert users find our synthetic damage indistinguishable from real. In addition, we demonstrate that training with our synthetically damaged dataset leads to improved artefact segmentation performance when compared to previously proposed synthetic analogue damage overlays. The synthetically damaged dataset can be found at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9. figshare.21815844, and the annotated authentic artefacts along with the resulting statistical damage model at https:// github.com/daniela997/FilmDamageSimulator. Finally, we use these datasets to train and analyse the performance of eight state-of-the-art image restoration methods on high-resolution scans. We compare both methods which directly perform the restoration task on scans with artefacts, and methods which require a damage mask to be provided for the inpainting of artefacts. We modify the methods to process the inputs in a patch-wise fashion to operate on original high resolution film scans.Item Unsupervised Template Warp Consistency for Implicit Surface Correspondences(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Liu, Mengya; Chhatkuli, Ajad; Postels, Janis; Gool, Luc Van; Tombari, Federico; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasUnsupervised template discovery via implicit representation in a category of shapes has recently shown strong performance. At the core, such methods deform input shapes to a common template space which allows establishing correspondences as well as implicit representation of the shapes. In this work we investigate the inherent assumption that the implicit neural field optimization naturally leads to consistently warped shapes, thus providing both good shape reconstruction and correspondences. Contrary to this convenient assumption, in practice we observe that such is not the case, consequently resulting in sub-optimal point correspondences. In order to solve the problem, we re-visit the warp design and more importantly introduce explicit constraints using unsupervised sparse point predictions, directly encouraging consistency of the warped shapes. We use the unsupervised sparse keypoints in order to further condition the deformation warp and enforce the consistency of the deformation warp. Experiments in dynamic non-rigid DFaust and ShapeNet categories show that our problem identification and solution provide the new state-of-the-art in unsupervised dense correspondences.Item How Will It Drape Like? Capturing Fabric Mechanics from Depth Images(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Rodriguez-Pardo, Carlos; Prieto-MartĂn, Melania; Casas, Dan; Garces, Elena; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasWe propose a method to estimate the mechanical parameters of fabrics using a casual capture setup with a depth camera. Our approach enables to create mechanically-correct digital representations of real-world textile materials, which is a fundamental step for many interactive design and engineering applications. As opposed to existing capture methods, which typically require expensive setups, video sequences, or manual intervention, our solution can capture at scale, is agnostic to the optical appearance of the textile, and facilitates fabric arrangement by non-expert operators. To this end, we propose a sim-to-real strategy to train a learning-based framework that can take as input one or multiple images and outputs a full set of mechanical parameters. Thanks to carefully designed data augmentation and transfer learning protocols, our solution generalizes to real images despite being trained only on synthetic data, hence successfully closing the sim-to-real loop. Key in our work is to demonstrate that evaluating the regression accuracy based on the similarity at parameter space leads to an inaccurate distances that do not match the human perception. To overcome this, we propose a novel metric for fabric drape similarity that operates on the image domain instead on the parameter space, allowing us to evaluate our estimation within the context of a similarity rank. We show that out metric correlates with human judgments about the perception of drape similarity, and that our model predictions produce perceptually accurate results compared to the ground truth parameters.Item Face Editing Using Part-Based Optimization of the Latent Space(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Aliari, Mohammad Amin; Beauchamp, Andre; Popa, Tiberiu; Paquette, Eric; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasWe propose an approach for interactive 3D face editing based on deep generative models. Most of the current face modeling methods rely on linear methods and cannot express complex and non-linear deformations. In contrast to 3D morphable face models based on Principal Component Analysis (PCA), we introduce a novel architecture based on variational autoencoders. Our architecture has multiple encoders (one for each part of the face, such as the nose and mouth) which feed a single decoder. As a result, each sub-vector of the latent vector represents one part. We train our model with a novel loss function that further disentangles the space based on different parts of the face. The output of the network is a whole 3D face. Hence, unlike partbased PCA methods, our model learns to merge the parts intrinsically and does not require an additional merging process. To achieve interactive face modeling, we optimize for the latent variables given vertex positional constraints provided by a user. To avoid unwanted global changes elsewhere on the face, we only optimize the subset of the latent vector that corresponds to the part of the face being modified. Our editing optimization converges in less than a second. Our results show that the proposed approach supports a broader range of editing constraints and generates more realistic 3D faces.Item In-the-wild Material Appearance Editing using Perceptual Attributes(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) SubĂas, JosĂ© Daniel; Lagunas, Manuel; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasIntuitively editing the appearance of materials from a single image is a challenging task given the complexity of the interactions between light and matter, and the ambivalence of human perception. This problem has been traditionally addressed by estimating additional factors of the scene like geometry or illumination, thus solving an inverse rendering problem and subduing the final quality of the results to the quality of these estimations. We present a single-image appearance editing framework that allows us to intuitively modify the material appearance of an object by increasing or decreasing high-level perceptual attributes describing such appearance (e.g., glossy or metallic). Our framework takes as input an in-the-wild image of a single object, where geometry, material, and illumination are not controlled, and inverse rendering is not required. We rely on generative models and devise a novel architecture with Selective Transfer Unit (STU) cells that allow to preserve the high-frequency details from the input image in the edited one. To train our framework we leverage a dataset with pairs of synthetic images rendered with physically-based algorithms, and the corresponding crowd-sourced ratings of high-level perceptual attributes. We show that our material editing framework outperforms the state of the art, and showcase its applicability on synthetic images, in-the-wild real-world photographs, and video sequences.Item Physics-Informed Neural Corrector for Deformation-based Fluid Control(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Tang, Jingwei; Kim, Byungsoo; Azevedo, Vinicius C.; Solenthaler, Barbara; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasControlling fluid simulations is notoriously difficult due to its high computational cost and the fact that user control inputs can cause unphysical motion. We present an interactive method for deformation-based fluid control. Our method aims at balancing the direct deformations of fluid fields and the preservation of physical characteristics. We train convolutional neural networks with physics-inspired loss functions together with a differentiable fluid simulator, and provide an efficient workflow for flow manipulations at test time. We demonstrate diverse test cases to analyze our carefully designed objectives and show that they lead to physical and eventually visually appealing modifications on edited fluid data.Item Scene-Aware 3D Multi-Human Motion Capture from a Single Camera(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Luvizon, Diogo C.; Habermann, Marc; Golyanik, Vladislav; Kortylewski, Adam; Theobalt, Christian; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasIn this work, we consider the problem of estimating the 3D position of multiple humans in a scene as well as their body shape and articulation from a single RGB video recorded with a static camera. In contrast to expensive marker-based or multi-view systems, our lightweight setup is ideal for private users as it enables an affordable 3D motion capture that is easy to install and does not require expert knowledge. To deal with this challenging setting, we leverage recent advances in computer vision using large-scale pre-trained models for a variety of modalities, including 2D body joints, joint angles, normalized disparity maps, and human segmentation masks. Thus, we introduce the first non-linear optimization-based approach that jointly solves for the 3D position of each human, their articulated pose, their individual shapes as well as the scale of the scene. In particular, we estimate the scene depth and person scale from normalized disparity predictions using the 2D body joints and joint angles. Given the per-frame scene depth, we reconstruct a point-cloud of the static scene in 3D space. Finally, given the per-frame 3D estimates of the humans and scene point-cloud, we perform a space-time coherent optimization over the video to ensure temporal, spatial and physical plausibility. We evaluate our method on established multi-person 3D human pose benchmarks where we consistently outperform previous methods and we qualitatively demonstrate that our method is robust to in-thewild conditions including challenging scenes with people of different sizes. Code: https://github.com/dluvizon/ scene-aware-3d-multi-humanItem EUROGRAPHICS 2023: CGF 42-2 Frontmatter(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, Matthias; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasItem Variational Pose Prediction with Dynamic Sample Selection from Sparse Tracking Signals(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Milef, Nicholas; Sueda, Shinjiro; Kalantari, Nima Khademi; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasWe propose a learning-based approach for full-body pose reconstruction from extremely sparse upper body tracking data, obtained from a virtual reality (VR) device. We leverage a conditional variational autoencoder with gated recurrent units to synthesize plausible and temporally coherent motions from 4-point tracking (head, hands, and waist positions and orientations). To avoid synthesizing implausible poses, we propose a novel sample selection and interpolation strategy along with an anomaly detection algorithm. Specifically, we monitor the quality of our generated poses using the anomaly detection algorithm and smoothly transition to better samples when the quality falls below a statistically defined threshold. Moreover, we demonstrate that our sample selection and interpolation method can be used for other applications, such as target hitting and collision avoidance, where the generated motions should adhere to the constraints of the virtual environment. Our system is lightweight, operates in real-time, and is able to produce temporally coherent and realistic motions.Item Robust Pointset Denoising of Piecewise-Smooth Surfaces through Line Processes(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Wei, Jiayi; Chen, Jiong; Rohmer, Damien; Memari, Pooran; Desbrun, Mathieu; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasDenoising is a common, yet critical operation in geometry processing aiming at recovering high-fidelity models of piecewisesmooth objects from noise-corrupted pointsets. Despite a sizable literature on the topic, there is a dearth of approaches capable of processing very noisy and outlier-ridden input pointsets for which no normal estimates and no assumptions on the underlying geometric features or noise type are provided. In this paper, we propose a new robust-statistics approach to denoising pointsets based on line processes to offer robustness to noise and outliers while preserving sharp features possibly present in the data. While the use of robust statistics in denoising is hardly new, most approaches rely on prescribed filtering using data-independent blending expressions based on the spatial and normal closeness of samples. Instead, our approach deduces a geometric denoising strategy through robust and regularized tangent plane fitting of the initial pointset, obtained numerically via alternating minimizations for efficiency and reliability. Key to our variational approach is the use of line processes to identify inliers vs. outliers, as well as the presence of sharp features. We demonstrate that our method can denoise sampled piecewise-smooth surfaces for levels of noise and outliers at which previous works fall short.Item Preserving the Autocovariance of Texture Tilings Using Importance Sampling(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Lutz, Nicolas; Sauvage, Basile; Dischler, Jean-Michel; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasBy-example aperiodic tilings are popular texture synthesis techniques that allow a fast, on-the-fly generation of unbounded and non-periodic textures with an appearance matching an arbitrary input sample called the ''exemplar''. But by relying on uniform random sampling, these algorithms fail to preserve the autocovariance function, resulting in correlations that do not match the ones in the exemplar. The output can then be perceived as excessively random. In this work, we present a new method which can well preserve the autocovariance function of the exemplar. It consists in fetching contents with an importance sampler taking the explicit autocovariance function as the probability density function (pdf) of the sampler. Our method can be controlled for increasing or decreasing the randomness aspect of the texture. Besides significantly improving synthesis quality for classes of textures characterized by pronounced autocovariance functions, we moreover propose a real-time tiling and blending scheme that permits the generation of high-quality textures faster than former algorithms with minimal downsides by reducing the number of texture fetches.Item An Optimization-based SPH Solver for Simulation of Hyperelastic Solids(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Kee, Min Hyung; Um, Kiwon; Kang, HyunMo; Han, JungHyun; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasThis paper proposes a novel method for simulating hyperelastic solids with Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH). The proposed method extends the coverage of the state-of-the-art elastic SPH solid method to include different types of hyperelastic materials, such as the Neo-Hookean and the St. Venant-Kirchoff models. To this end, we reformulate an implicit integration scheme for SPH elastic solids into an optimization problem and solve the problem using a general-purpose quasi-Newton method. Our experiments show that the Limited-memory BFGS (L-BFGS) algorithm can be employed to efficiently solve our optimization problem in the SPH framework and demonstrate its stable and efficient simulations for complex materials in the SPH framework. Thanks to the nature of our unified representation for both solids and fluids, the SPH formulation simplifies coupling between different materials and handling collisions.Item Non-linear Rough 2D Animation using Transient Embeddings(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Even, Melvin; BĂ©nard, Pierre; Barla, Pascal; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasTraditional 2D animation requires time and dedication since tens of thousands of frames need to be drawn by hand for a typical production. Many computer-assisted methods have been proposed to automatize the generation of inbetween frames from a set of clean line drawings, but they are all limited by a rigid workflow and a lack of artistic controls, which is in the most part due to the one-to-one stroke matching and interpolation problems they attempt to solve. In this work, we take a novel view on those problems by focusing on an earlier phase of the animation process that uses rough drawings (i.e., sketches). Our key idea is to recast the matching and interpolation problems so that they apply to transient embeddings, which are groups of strokes that only exist for a few keyframes. A transient embedding carries strokes between keyframes both forward and backward in time through a sequence of transformed lattices. Forward and backward strokes are then cross-faded using their thickness to yield rough inbetweens. With our approach, complex topological changes may be introduced while preserving visual motion continuity. As demonstrated on state-of-the-art 2D animation exercises, our system provides unprecedented artistic control through the non-linear exploration of movements and dynamics in real-time.Item Parallel Transformation of Bounding Volume Hierarchies into Oriented Bounding Box Trees(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2023) Vitsas, Nick; Evangelou, Iordanis; Papaioannou, Georgios; Gkaravelis, Anastasios; Myszkowski, Karol; Niessner, MatthiasOriented bounding box (OBB) hierarchies can be used instead of hierarchies based on axis-aligned bounding boxes (AABB), providing tighter fitting to the underlying geometric structures and resulting in improved interference tests, such as ray-geometry intersections. In this paper, we present a method for the fast, parallel transformation of an existing bounding volume hierarchy (BVH), based on AABBs, into a hierarchy based on oriented bounding boxes. To this end, we parallelise a high-quality OBB extraction algorithm from the literature to operate as a standalone OBB estimator and further extend it to efficiently build an OBB hierarchy in a bottom up manner. This agglomerative approach allows for fast parallel execution and the formation of arbitrary, high-quality OBBs in bounding volume hierarchies. The method is fully implemented on the GPU and extensively evaluated with ray intersections.