Defining and Computing Curve-skeletons with Medial Geodesic Function
Abstract
Many applications in geometric modeling, computer graphics, visualization and computer vision benefit from a reduced representation called curve-skeletons of a shape. These are curves possibly with branches which compactly represent the shape geometry and topology. The lack of a proper mathematical definition has been a bottleneck in developing and applying the the curve-skeletons. A set of desirable properties of these skeletons has been identified and the existing algorithms try to satisfy these properties mainly through a procedural definition. We define a function called medial geodesic on the medial axis which leads to a methematical definition and an approximation algorithm for curve-skeletons. Empirical study shows that the algorithm is robust against noise, operates well with a single user parameter, and produces curve-skeletons with the desirable properties. Moreover, the curveskeletons can be associated with additional attributes that follow naturally from the definition. These attributes capture shape eccentricity, a local measure of how far a shape is away from a tubular one.
BibTeX
@inproceedings {10.2312:SGP:SGP06:143-152,
booktitle = {Symposium on Geometry Processing},
editor = {Alla Sheffer and Konrad Polthier},
title = {{Defining and Computing Curve-skeletons with Medial Geodesic Function}},
author = {Dey, Tamal K. and Sun, Jian},
year = {2006},
publisher = {The Eurographics Association},
ISSN = {1727-8384},
ISBN = {3-905673-24-X},
DOI = {10.2312/SGP/SGP06/143-152}
}
booktitle = {Symposium on Geometry Processing},
editor = {Alla Sheffer and Konrad Polthier},
title = {{Defining and Computing Curve-skeletons with Medial Geodesic Function}},
author = {Dey, Tamal K. and Sun, Jian},
year = {2006},
publisher = {The Eurographics Association},
ISSN = {1727-8384},
ISBN = {3-905673-24-X},
DOI = {10.2312/SGP/SGP06/143-152}
}