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Smoothing 3D Meshes using Markov Random Fields

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Presentation on theme: "Smoothing 3D Meshes using Markov Random Fields"— Presentation transcript:

1 Smoothing 3D Meshes using Markov Random Fields
Vedrana Andersen

2 Overview Aim: To investigate the use of Markov Random Fields (MRF) for formulating priors on 3D surfaces represented as triangle meshes Focus on: Mesh smoothing, feature-preserving mesh smoothing (preserving surface ridges) Vertex process and edge process

3 MRF THEORY Markov Random Fields
Random fields, sites, labels, labeling Markov Random Fields, Markovianity, neighborhood system and cliques Markov-Gibbs equivalence Gibbs Random Fields (Gibbs distribution)

4 MESH SMOOTHING Smoothness Prior
Mesh smoothing: sites – vertices, labels – spatial positions of vertices Absolute mean curvature: dihedral angle and edge length Potential of the smoothness prior

5 MESH SMOOTHING Smoothness Prior
Potential assigned to all 4-cliques of vertices

6 MRF THEORY MAP-MRF Labeling
Maximum a-posteriori solution Bayes rule In terms of energy

7 MESH SMOOTHING Likelihood Function
Input mesh – underlying surface corrupted by noise Noise: isotropic Gaussian Likelihood energy

8 MESH SMOOTHING Optimization
Metropolis sampler with simulated annealing Sampling – new candidate positions Metropolis criterion Cooling scheme

9 MESH SMOOTHING Optimization
Optimization parameters: Sampling step size Initial temperature and annealing constant Modeling parameter: Weight of the data term

10 MESH SMOOTHING Results
10x10x10 cube corrupted with Gaussian noise (σ=0.3 average edge length) Very slow cooling, 500 iterations, (Fig. 7.3)

11 MESH SMOOTHING Results
Monitoring the potentials and the number of updates over time

12 MESH SMOOTHING Results
Smoothing with a zero temperature, iterations, (Fig. 7.5)

13 MESH SMOOTHING Discussion
Convergence, monitoring Sensitive to the size of the sampling step Optimization? Annealing? What is a smooth mesh?

14 MESH SMOOTHING Alternative Formulations
Original formulation – dihedral angles and edge lengths Quadratic and square-root potentials

15 MESH SMOOTHING Alternative Formulations
Angle based potential – indifferent Quadratic – over-smoothing Square root – feature preserving

16 MESH SMOOTHING Alternative Formulations
Results of using curvature-based, quadratic and square-root potential, 300 iterations (Fig. 7.15)

17 MESH SMOOTHING Alternative Formulations
Feature preserving – thresholded smoothness potential, implicit edge labeling Conclusion: Control achieved by the choice of the smoothness potential

18 FEATURE DETECTION Edge Labeling
Detecting feature edges – ridges of the underlying surface Idea: To use edge labels as weights for smoothing process Based on: edge sharpness, neighborhood support.

19 FEATURE DETECTION Edge Labeling
continuous or discrete, deterministic or stochastic.

20 FEATURE DETECTION Ridge Sharpness
Sharpness threshold Ф0 Deterministic case: thresholding, cut-off function.

21 FEATURE DETECTION Ridge Sharpness
Stochastic case (MRF framework, assigning sharpness potential to 1-edge cliques of edges): linear potential alternative: difference from cut-off function

22 FEATURE DETECTION Neighborhood Support
Support threshold θ0 Idea: Presence of sharp edges in the neighborhood influences labeling

23 FEATURE DETECTION Neighborhood Support
Stochastic case discrete linear formulation alternative: penalizing label differences along a line

24 FEATURE DETECTION Edge Labeling Results
Labeling edges of the fandisk model, (Fig. 9.2)

25 FEATURE DETECTION Two Questions
Neighborhood support – does it help? If not, edge sharpness – is it needed? Relevant for coupled models

26 FEATURE-PRESERVING MESH SMOOTHING Coupled Model
Using edge labels as weights Potentials contributing to the total posterior energy: smoothness, likelihood, edge labeling (sharpness and neighborhood support)

27 FEATURE-PRESERVING MESH SMOOTHING Coupled Model
Minimizing total posterior energy, or… Alternating between vertex process and edge process Independent cooling schemes Ordering of vertex and edge process

28 FEATURE-PRESERVING MESH SMOOTHING Results
Smoothing the noisy cube, noise 0.2 average edge length, (Fig. 11.5)

29 FEATURE-PRESERVING MESH SMOOTHING Results
Reconstructing the fandisk model, noise 0.2 average edge length, (Fig. 11.7)

30 FEATURE-PRESERVING MESH SMOOTHING Discusion
Two questions revisited: Neighborhood support? Edge labeling? Control vs. automation

31 FEATURE-PRESERVING MESH SMOOTHING Possible Improvements
Sampling (shape, adaptive step) Optimization (deterministic?) Larger neighborhood for edge labeling Surface to surface smoothing Mesh optimization Future work: Piecewise-quadratic surfaces

32 Thank you!


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