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Surface reconstruction from unorganized points

Published: 01 July 1992 Publication History

Abstract

We describe and demonstrate an algorithm that takes as input an unorganized set of points {xl, . . . . xn} ⊂ R3 on or near an unknown manifold M, and produces as output a simplicial surface that approximates M. Neither the topology, the presence of boundaries, nor the geometry of M are assumed to be known in advance - all are inferred automatically from the data. This problem naturally arises in a variety of practical situations such as range scanning an object from multiple view points, recovery of biological shapes from two-dimensional slices, and interactive surface sketching.

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Reviews

Joseph J. O'Rourke

The problem of taking an unorganized cloud of points in space and fitting a polyhedral surface to those points is both important and difficult. This paper presents an algorithm that achieves impressive results. It consists of two primary stages, with several subsidiary steps. The first stage is to define a function f that maps all points “near” the input data to a signed distance from the conjectured best fit surface. The second stage finds a triangulated surface that approximates the zero-set of f . This second stage applies a known contour-tracing technique, the “marching cubes” algorithm, and a postprocessing step to improve the aspect ratio of the triangles. The first stage is innovative. Its first step is to assign an oriented tangent plane to each input data point p by first fitting a plane to the k nearest neighbors of p (the authors use values of k from 10 to 40), and then choosing an orientation for the planes to be consistent with nearby orientations. This step is key. Consistency is maintained by constructing a graph G connecting two points if either is one of k nearest to the other, and weighting these arcs by the degree to which the corresponding tangent planes are parallel. Then the weighted minimum spanning tree T of G is found. Starting with the known orientation of the plane for the highest point, the orientations are propagated along T . This process has the effect of establishing the low-curvature orientations before the complex portions of the surface are tackled. With the oriented tangent planes available, the signed distance f p from any point p to the surface can be approximated by using the tangent plane for the nearest point. Once a rule for computing f is in hand, the zero-set is constructed as previously described. The algorithm makes certain sampling assumptions for the input data that may not hold in practical situations. It would be interesting to learn how the algorithm performs in practice. A rather different attempt to achieve the same goals was developed independently by Veltkamp [1]; neither work refers to the other, no doubt because they evolved simultaneously.

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Published In

cover image ACM SIGGRAPH Computer Graphics
ACM SIGGRAPH Computer Graphics  Volume 26, Issue 2
July 1992
366 pages
ISSN:0097-8930
DOI:10.1145/142920
Issue’s Table of Contents
  • cover image ACM Conferences
    SIGGRAPH '92: Proceedings of the 19th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
    July 1992
    420 pages
    ISBN:0897914791
    DOI:10.1145/133994
Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

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Publication History

Published: 01 July 1992
Published in SIGGRAPH Volume 26, Issue 2

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Author Tags

  1. geometric modeling
  2. range data analysis
  3. surface fitting
  4. three-dimensional shape recovery

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  • (2024)Low‐complexity patch projection method for efficient and lightweight point‐cloud compressionETRI Journal10.4218/etrij.2023-024246:4(683-696)Online publication date: 15-May-2024
  • (2024)三维点云数据的精确快速面图元检测方法Laser & Optoelectronics Progress10.3788/LOP23054961:4(0415006)Online publication date: 2024
  • (2024)Artificial intelligence-assisted restoration and visualization of knapped stone toolsPrehistoric Archaeology10.3724/2097-3063.202400161:2(207-223)Online publication date: 23-Jul-2024
  • (2024)Customized Orthosis Design Based on Surface Reconstruction from 3D-Scanned PointsProsthesis10.3390/prosthesis60100086:1(93-106)Online publication date: 24-Jan-2024
  • (2024)An Improved Large Planar Point Cloud Registration AlgorithmElectronics10.3390/electronics1314269613:14(2696)Online publication date: 10-Jul-2024
  • (2024)CALCULATION OF SPALLING AREA ON REINFORCED CONCRETE MEMBERS USING SFMSfMを用いた鉄筋コンクリート造部材剥落領域の計測AIJ Journal of Technology and Design10.3130/aijt.30.126930:76(1269-1274)Online publication date: 20-Oct-2024
  • (2024)Leaf Reconstruction Based on Gaussian Mixture Model from Point Clouds of Leaf Boundaries and VeinsInternational Journal of Automation Technology10.20965/ijat.2024.p028718:2(287-294)Online publication date: 5-Mar-2024
  • (2024)A coarse matching method used on the scattered point cloudsProceedings of the 2024 International Conference on Computer and Multimedia Technology10.1145/3675249.3675265(88-93)Online publication date: 24-May-2024
  • (2024)A Linear Method to Consistently Orient Normals of a 3D Point CloudACM SIGGRAPH 2024 Conference Papers10.1145/3641519.3657429(1-10)Online publication date: 13-Jul-2024
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