A divide-and-conquer approach for automatic polycube map construction

  • Ying He*
  • , Hongyu Wang
  • , Chi Wing Fu
  • , Hong Qin
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Polycube map is a global cross-surface parameterization technique, where the polycube shape can roughly approximate the geometry of modeled objects while retaining the same topology. The large variation of shape geometry and its complex topological type in real-world applications make it difficult to effectively construct a high-quality polycube that can serve as a good global parametric domain for a given object. In practice, existing polycube map construction algorithms typically require a large amount of user interaction for either pre-constructing the polycubes with great care or interactively specifying the geometric constraints to arrive at the user-satisfied maps. Hence, it is tedious and labor intensive to construct polycube maps for surfaces of complicated geometry and topology. This paper aims to develop an effective method to construct polycube maps for surfaces with complicated topology and geometry. Using our method, users can simply specify how close the target polycube mimics a given shape in a quantitative way. Our algorithm can both construct a similar polycube of high geometric fidelity and compute a high-quality polycube map in an automatic fashion. In addition, our method is theoretically guaranteed to output a one-to-one map. To demonstrate the efficacy of our method, we apply the automatically-constructed polycube maps in a number of computer graphics applications, such as seamless texture tiling, T-spline construction, and quadrilateral mesh generation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)369-380
Number of pages12
JournalComputers and Graphics
Volume33
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2009
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Computational geometry
  • Discrete Ricci flow
  • Geometric algorithms
  • Object modeling
  • Polycube map
  • Shape modeling
  • Uniform flat metric

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