IEEE VIS Publication Dataset

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Vis
2007
Listener-based Analysis of Surface Importance for Acoustic Metrics
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70575
1. 1687
J
Acoustic quality in room acoustics is measured by well defined quantities, like definition, which can be derived from simulated impulse response filters or measured values. These take into account the intensity and phase shift of multiple reflections due to a wave front emanating from a sound source. Definition (D50) and clarity (C50) for example correspond to the fraction of the energy received in total to the energy received in the first 50 ms at a certain listener position. Unfortunately, the impulse response measured at a single point does not provide any information about the direction of reflections, and about the reflection surfaces which contribute to this measure. For the visualization of room acoustics, however, this information is very useful since it allows to discover regions with high contribution and provides insight into the influence of all reflecting surfaces to the quality measure. We use the phonon tracing method to calculate the contribution of the reflection surfaces to the impulse response for different listener positions. This data is used to compute importance values for the geometry taking a certain acoustic metric into account. To get a visual insight into the directional aspect, we map the importance to the reflecting surfaces of the geometry. This visualization indicates which parts of the surfaces need to be changed to enhance the chosen acoustic quality measure. We apply our method to the acoustic improvement of a lecture hall by means of enhancing the overall speech comprehensibility (clarity) and evaluate the results using glyphs to visualize the clarity (C50) values at listener positions throughout the room.
Michel, F.;Deines, E.;Hering-Bertram, M.;Garth, C.;Hagen, H.
IRTG Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern|c|;;;;
10.1109/TVCG.2006.125;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532790
Sound analytics, Applications of Visualization, Room Acoustics, Phonon Tracing, Acoustic Metric
Vis
2007
LiveSync: Deformed Viewing Spheres for Knowledge-Based Navigation
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70576
1. 1551
J
Although real-time interactive volume rendering is available even for very large data sets, this visualization method is used quite rarely in the clinical practice. We suspect this is because it is very complicated and time consuming to adjust the parameters to achieve meaningful results. The clinician has to take care of the appropriate viewpoint, zooming, transfer function setup, clipping planes and other parameters. Because of this, most often only 2D slices of the data set are examined. Our work introduces LiveSync, a new concept to synchronize 2D slice views and volumetric views of medical data sets. Through intuitive picking actions on the slice, the users define the anatomical structures they are interested in. The 3D volumetric view is updated automatically with the goal that the users are provided with expressive result images. To achieve this live synchronization we use a minimal set of derived information without the need for segmented data sets or data-specific pre-computations. The components we consider are the picked point, slice view zoom, patient orientation, viewpoint history, local object shape and visibility. We introduce deformed viewing spheres which encode the viewpoint quality for the components. A combination of these deformed viewing spheres is used to estimate a good viewpoint. Our system provides the physician with synchronized views which help to gain deeper insight into the medical data with minimal user interaction.
Kohlmann, P.;Bruckner, S.;Kanitsar, A.;Kanitsar, A.
Vienna Univ. of Technol., Vienna|c|;;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532834;10.1109/TVCG.2006.152;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532833
Navigation, interaction, linked views, medical visualization, viewpoint selection
Vis
2007
Molecular Surface Abstraction
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70578
1. 1615
J
In this paper we introduce a visualization technique that provides an abstracted view of the shape and spatio-physico-chemical properties of complex molecules. Unlike existing molecular viewing methods, our approach suppresses small details to facilitate rapid comprehension, yet marks the location of significant features so they remain visible. Our approach uses a combination of filters and mesh restructuring to generate a simplified representation that conveys the overall shape and spatio-physico-chemical properties (e.g. electrostatic charge). Surface markings are then used in the place of important removed details, as well as to supply additional information. These simplified representations are amenable to display using stylized rendering algorithms to further enhance comprehension. Our initial experience suggests that our approach is particularly useful in browsing collections of large molecules and in readily making comparisons between them.
Cipriano, G.;Gleicher, M.
Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison|c|;
10.1109/VISUAL.1993.398882;10.1109/VISUAL.2002.1183769;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532822;10.1109/VISUAL.2002.1183780;10.1109/VISUAL.2004.62;10.1109/TVCG.2006.115
molecular surfaces, molecular visualization, surfaces, textures, cartographic labeling
Vis
2007
Moment Invariants for the Analysis of 2D Flow fields
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70579
1. 1750
J
We present a novel approach for analyzing two-dimensional (2D) flow field data based on the idea of invariant moments. Moment invariants have traditionally been used in computer vision applications, and we have adapted them for the purpose of interactive exploration of flow field data. The new class of moment invariants we have developed allows us to extract and visualize 2D flow patterns, invariant under translation, scaling, and rotation. With our approach one can study arbitrary flow patterns by searching a given 2D flow data set for any type of pattern as specified by a user. Further, our approach supports the computation of moments at multiple scales, facilitating fast pattern extraction and recognition. This can be done for critical point classification, but also for patterns with greater complexity. This multi-scale moment representation is also valuable for the comparative visualization of flow field data. The specific novel contributions of the work presented are the mathematical derivation of the new class of moment invariants, their analysis regarding critical point features, the efficient computation of a novel feature space representation, and based upon this the development of a fast pattern recognition algorithm for complex flow structures.
Schlemmer, M.;Heringer, M.;Morr, F.;Hotz, I.;Bertam, M.;Garth, C.;Kollmann, W.;Hamann, B.;Hagen, H.
Univ. of Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern|c|;;;;;;;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2004.68;10.1109/VISUAL.1999.809873;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532858;10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250372
Flow Visualization, Feature Detection, Pattern Extraction, Pattern Recognition, Image Processing
Vis
2007
Multifield Visualization Using Local Statistical Complexity
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70615
1. 1391
J
Modern unsteady (multi-)field visualizations require an effective reduction of the data to be displayed. From a huge amount of information the most informative parts have to be extracted. Instead of the fuzzy application dependent notion of feature, a new approach based on information theoretic concepts is introduced in this paper to detect important regions. This is accomplished by extending the concept of local statistical complexity from finite state cellular automata to discretized (multi-)fields. Thus, informative parts of the data can be highlighted in an application-independent, purely mathematical sense. The new measure can be applied to unsteady multifields on regular grids in any application domain. The ability to detect and visualize important parts is demonstrated using diffusion, flow, and weather simulations.
Jänicke, H.;Wiebel, A.;Scheuermann, G.;Kollmann, W.
Univ. of Leipzig, Leipzig|c|;;;
10.1109/VISUAL.1999.809865;10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250372;10.1109/TVCG.2006.165;10.1109/VISUAL.1999.809905;10.1109/TVCG.2006.183;10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250383
Local statistical complexity, multifield visualization, time-dependent, coherent structures, feature detection, information theroy, flow visualization
Vis
2007
Navigating in a Shape Space of Registered Models
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70581
1. 1559
J
New product development involves people with different backgrounds. Designers, engineers, and consumers all have different design criteria, and these criteria interact. Early concepts evolve in this kind of collaborative context, and there is a need for dynamic visualization of the interaction between design shape and other shape-related design criteria. In this paper, a morphable model is defined from simplified representations of suitably chosen real cars, providing a continuous shape space to navigate, manipulate and visualize. Physical properties and consumer-provided scores for the real cars (such as 'weight' and 'sportiness') are estimated for new designs across the shape space. This coupling allows one to manipulate the shape directly while reviewing the impact on estimated criteria, or conversely, to manipulate the criterial values of the current design to produce a new shape with more desirable attributes.
Smith, R.C.;Pawlicki, R.;Kokai, I.R.;Finger, J.;Vetter, T.
GM R&D, Bangalore|c|;;;;
Morphable model, shape space, barycentric coordinates, design space
Vis
2007
Querying and Creating Visualizations by Analogy
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70584
1. 1567
J
While there have been advances in visualization systems, particularly in multi-view visualizations and visual exploration, the process of building visualizations remains a major bottleneck in data exploration. We show that provenance metadata collected during the creation of pipelines can be reused to suggest similar content in related visualizations and guide semi-automated changes. We introduce the idea of query-by-example in the context of an ensemble of visualizations, and the use of analogies as first-class operations in a system to guide scalable interactions. We describe an implementation of these techniques in VisTrails, a publicly-available, open-source system.
Scheidegger, C.E.;Vo, H.T.;Koop, D.;Freire, J.;Silva, C.T.
Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake|c|;;;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532781;10.1109/INFVIS.2004.2;10.1109/VISUAL.2004.112;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532788;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532795
visualization systems, query-by-example, analogy
Vis
2007
Random-Accessible Compressed Triangle Meshes
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70585
1. 1543
J
With the exponential growth in size of geometric data, it is becoming increasingly important to make effective use of multilevel caches, limited disk storage, and bandwidth. As a result, recent work in the visualization community has focused either on designing sequential access compression schemes or on producing cache-coherent layouts of (uncompressed) meshes for random access. Unfortunately combining these two strategies is challenging as they fundamentally assume conflicting modes of data access. In this paper, we propose a novel order-preserving compression method that supports transparent random access to compressed triangle meshes. Our decompression method selectively fetches from disk, decodes, and caches in memory requested parts of a mesh. We also provide a general mesh access API for seamless mesh traversal and incidence queries. While the method imposes no particular mesh layout, it is especially suitable for cache-oblivious layouts, which minimize the number of decompression I/O requests and provide high cache utilization during access to decompressed, in-memory portions of the mesh. Moreover, the transparency of our scheme enables improved performance without the need for application code changes. We achieve compression rates on the order of 20:1 and significantly improved I/O performance due to reduced data transfer. To demonstrate the benefits of our method, we implement two common applications as benchmarks. By using cache-oblivious layouts for the input models, we observe 2-6 times overall speedup compared to using uncompressed meshes.
Sung-Eui Yoon;Lindstrom, P.
Korea Adv. Inst. of Sci. & Technol.|c|;
10.1109/VISUAL.2002.1183796;10.1109/TVCG.2006.143;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532800;10.1109/TVCG.2006.162;10.1109/VISUAL.2001.964532
Mesh compression, random access, cache-coherent layouts, mesh data structures, external memory algorithms
Vis
2007
Registration Techniques for Using Imperfect and Par tially Calibrated Devices in Planar Multi-Projector Displays
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70586
1. 1375
J
Multi-projector displays today are automatically registered, both geometrically and photometrically, using cameras. Existing registration techniques assume pre-calibrated projectors and cameras that are devoid of imperfections such as lens distortion. In practice, however, these devices are usually imperfect and uncalibrated. Registration of each of these devices is often more challenging than the multi-projector display registration itself. To make tiled projection-based displays accessible to a layman user we should allow the use of uncalibrated inexpensive devices that are prone to imperfections. In this paper, we make two important advances in this direction. First, we present a new geometric registration technique that can achieve geometric alignment in the presence of severe projector lens distortion using a relatively inexpensive low-resolution camera. This is achieved via a closed-form model that relates the projectors to cameras, in planar multi-projector displays, using rational Bezier patches. This enables us to geometrically calibrate a 3000 times 2500 resolution planar multi-projector display made of 3 times 3 array of nine severely distorted projectors using a low resolution (640 times 480) VGA camera. Second, we present a photometric self-calibration technique for a projector-camera pair. This allows us to photometrically calibrate the same display made of nine projectors using a photometrically uncalibrated camera. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work that allows geometrically imperfect projectors and photometrically uncalibrated cameras in calibrating multi-projector displays.
Bhasker, E.;Juang, R.;Majumder, A.
Univ. of California, Irvine|c|;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2001.964508;10.1109/TVCG.2006.121;10.1109/VISUAL.2000.885685;10.1109/VISUAL.2002.1183793;10.1109/VISUAL.2000.885684;10.1109/VISUAL.1999.809883
Geometric calibration, photometric calibration, tiled displays
Vis
2007
Scalable Hybrid Unstructured and Structured Grid Raycasting
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70588
1. 1599
J
This paper presents a scalable framework for real-time raycasting of large unstructured volumes that employs a hybrid bricking approach. It adaptively combines original unstructured bricks in important (focus) regions, with structured bricks that are resampled on demand in less important (context) regions. The basis of this focus+context approach is interactive specification of a scalar degree of interest (DOI) function. Thus, rendering always considers two volumes simultaneously: a scalar data volume, and the current DOI volume. The crucial problem of visibility sorting is solved by raycasting individual bricks and compositing in visibility order from front to back. In order to minimize visual errors at the grid boundary, it is always rendered accurately, even for resampled bricks. A variety of different rendering modes can be combined, including contour enhancement. A very important property of our approach is that it supports a variety of cell types natively, i.e., it is not constrained to tetrahedral grids, even when interpolation within cells is used. Moreover, our framework can handle multi-variate data, e.g., multiple scalar channels such as temperature or pressure, as well as time-dependent data. The combination of unstructured and structured bricks with different quality characteristics such as the type of interpolation or resampling resolution in conjunction with custom texture memory management yields a very scalable system.
Muigg, P.;Hadwiger, M.;Doleisch, H.;Hauser, H.
VRVis Res. Center|c|;;;
10.1109/TVCG.2006.171;10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250390;10.1109/TVCG.2006.124;10.1109/VISUAL.2001.964514;10.1109/TVCG.2006.152;10.1109/TVCG.2006.110;10.1109/TVCG.2006.154;10.1109/VISUAL.2000.885683;10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250384;10.1109/VISUAL.2001.964512;10.1109/VISUAL.1999.809908
Volume Rendering of Unstructured Grids, Focus+Context Techniques, Hardware-Assisted Volume Rendering
Vis
2007
Segmentation of Three-dimensional Retinal Image Data
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70590
1. 1726
J
We have combined methods from volume visualization and data analysis to support better diagnosis and treatment of human retinal diseases. Many diseases can be identified by abnormalities in the thicknesses of various retinal layers captured using optical coherence tomography (OCT). We used a support vector machine (SVM) to perform semi-automatic segmentation of retinal layers for subsequent analysis including a comparison of layer thicknesses to known healthy parameters. We have extended and generalized an older SVM approach to support better performance in a clinical setting through performance enhancements and graceful handling of inherent noise in OCT data by considering statistical characteristics at multiple levels of resolution. The addition of the multi-resolution hierarchy extends the SVM to have "global awareness". A feature, such as a retinal layer, can therefore be modeled within the SVM as a combination of statistical characteristics across all levels; thus capturing high- and low-frequency information. We have compared our semi-automatically generated segmentations to manually segmented layers for verification purposes. Our main goals were to provide a tool that could (i) be used in a clinical setting; (ii) operate on noisy OCT data; and (iii) isolate individual or multiple retinal layers in both healthy and disease cases that contain structural deformities.
Fuller, A.R.;Zawadzki, R.J.;Choi, S.;Wiley, D.F.;Werner, J.S.;Hamann, B.
Univ. of California at Davis, Davis|c|;;;;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2001.964519;10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250413
support vector machine, segmentation, image analysis, retinal, optical coherence tomography, volume visualization, image processing
Vis
2007
Semantic Layers for Illustrative Volume Rendering
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70591
1. 1343
J
Direct volume rendering techniques map volumetric attributes (e.g., density, gradient magnitude, etc.) to visual styles. Commonly this mapping is specified by a transfer function. The specification of transfer functions is a complex task and requires expert knowledge about the underlying rendering technique. In the case of multiple volumetric attributes and multiple visual styles the specification of the multi-dimensional transfer function becomes more challenging and non-intuitive. We present a novel methodology for the specification of a mapping from several volumetric attributes to multiple illustrative visual styles. We introduce semantic layers that allow a domain expert to specify the mapping in the natural language of the domain. A semantic layer defines the mapping of volumetric attributes to one visual style. Volumetric attributes and visual styles are represented as fuzzy sets. The mapping is specified by rules that are evaluated with fuzzy logic arithmetics. The user specifies the fuzzy sets and the rules without special knowledge about the underlying rendering technique. Semantic layers allow for a linguistic specification of the mapping from attributes to visual styles replacing the traditional transfer function specification.
Rautek, P.;Bruckner, S.;Groller, E.
Vienna Univ. of Technol., Vienna|c|;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2004.95;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532792;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532807;10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250414;10.1109/VISUAL.2004.64;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532856;10.1109/TVCG.2006.164;10.1109/TVCG.2006.148
Illustrative Visualization, Focus+Context Techniques, Volume Visualization
Vis
2007
Shadow-Driven 4D Haptic Visualization
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70593
1. 1695
J
Just as we can work with two-dimensional floor plans to communicate 3D architectural design, we can exploit reduced- dimension shadows to manipulate the higher-dimensional objects generating the shadows. In particular, by taking advantage of physically reactive 3D shadow-space controllers, we can transform the task of interacting with 4D objects to a new level of physical reality. We begin with a teaching tool that uses 2D knot diagrams to manipulate the geometry of 3D mathematical knots via their projections; our unique 2D haptic interface allows the user to become familiar with sketching, editing, exploration, and manipulation of 3D knots rendered as projected images on a 2D shadow space. By combining graphics and collision-sensing haptics, we can enhance the 2D shadow-driven editing protocol to successfully leverage 2D pen-and-paper or blackboard skills. Building on the reduced-dimension 2D editing tool for manipulating 3D shapes, we develop the natural analogy to produce a reduced-dimension 3D tool for manipulating 4D shapes. By physically modeling the correct properties of 4D surfaces, their bending forces, and their collisions in the 3D haptic controller interface, we can support full-featured physical exploration of 4D mathematical objects in a manner that is otherwise far beyond the experience accessible to human beings. As far as we are aware, this paper reports the first interactive system with force-feedback that provides "4D haptic visualization" permitting the user to model and interact with 4D cloth-like objects.
Hui Zhang;Hanson, A.J.
Indiana Univ., Bloomington|c|;
10.1109/VISUAL.1996.568120;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532804
knot theory, haptics, visualization
Vis
2007
Similarity-Guided Streamline Placement with Error Evaluation
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70595
1. 1455
J
Most streamline generation algorithms either provide a particular density of streamlines across the domain or explicitly detect features, such as critical points, and follow customized rules to emphasize those features. However, the former generally includes many redundant streamlines, and the latter requires Boolean decisions on which points are features (and may thus suffer from robustness problems for real-world data). We take a new approach to adaptive streamline placement for steady vector fields in 2D and 3D. We define a metric for local similarity among streamlines and use this metric to grow streamlines from a dense set of candidate seed points. The metric considers not only Euclidean distance, but also a simple statistical measure of shape and directional similarity. Without explicit feature detection, our method produces streamlines that naturally accentuate regions of geometric interest. In conjunction with this method, we also propose a quantitative error metric for evaluating a streamline representation based on how well it preserves the information from the original vector field. This error metric reconstructs a vector field from points on the streamline representation and computes a difference of the reconstruction from the original vector field.
Yuan Chen;Cohen, J.D.;Krolik, J.H.
Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore|c|;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532831;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532832;10.1109/VISUAL.2004.87;10.1109/VISUAL.2001.964530;10.1109/TVCG.2006.116;10.1109/VISUAL.2000.885690
Adaptive streamlines, vector field reconstruction, shape matching
Vis
2007
Stochastic DT-MRI Connectivity Mapping on the GPU
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70597
1. 1511
J
We present a method for stochastic fiber tract mapping from diffusion tensor MRI (DT-MRI) implemented on graphics hardware. From the simulated fibers we compute a connectivity map that gives an indication of the probability that two points in the dataset are connected by a neuronal fiber path. A Bayesian formulation of the fiber model is given and it is shown that the inversion method can be used to construct plausible connectivity. An implementation of this fiber model on the graphics processing unit (GPU) is presented. Since the fiber paths can be stochastically generated independently of one another, the algorithm is highly parallelizable. This allows us to exploit the data-parallel nature of the GPU fragment processors. We also present a framework for the connectivity computation on the GPU. Our implementation allows the user to interactively select regions of interest and observe the evolving connectivity results during computation. Results are presented from the stochastic generation of over 250,000 fiber steps per iteration at interactive frame rates on consumer-grade graphics hardware.
McGraw, T.;Nadar, M.
West Virginia Univ, Morgantown|c|;
10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532780;10.1109/TVCG.2006.134;10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250384;10.1109/VISUAL.1998.745294;10.1109/VISUAL.1999.809886;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532779;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532777;10.1109/VISUAL.1999.809904;10.1109/TVCG.2006.151
diffusion tensor, magnetic resonance imaging, stochastic tractography
Vis
2007
Surface Extraction from Multi-Material Components for Metrology using Dual Energy CT
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70598
1. 1527
J
This paper describes a novel method for creating surface models of multi-material components using dual energy computed tomography (DECT). The application scenario is metrology and dimensional measurement in industrial high resolution 3D X-ray computed tomography (3DCT). Based on the dual source / dual exposure technology this method employs 3DCT scans of a high precision micro-focus and a high energy macro-focus X-ray source. The presented work makes use of the advantages of dual X-ray exposure technology in order to facilitate dimensional measurements of multi-material components with high density material within low density material. We propose a workflow which uses image fusion and local surface extraction techniques: a prefiltering step reduces noise inherent in the data. For image fusion the datasets have to be registered. In the fusion step the benefits of both scans are combined. The structure of the specimen is taken from the low precision, blurry, high energy dataset while the sharp edges are adopted and fused into the resulting image from the high precision, crisp, low energy dataset. In the final step a reliable surface model is extracted from the fused dataset using a local adaptive technique. The major contribution of this paper is the development of a specific workflow for dimensional measurements of multi-material industrial components, which takes two X-ray CT datasets with complementary strengths and weaknesses into account. The performance of the workflow is discussed using a test specimen as well as two real world industrial parts. As result, a significant improvement in overall measurement precision, surface geometry and mean deviation to reference measurement compared to single exposure scans was facilitated.
Heinzl, C.;Kastner, J.;Groller, E.
Upper Austrian Univ. of Appl. Sci., Wels|c|;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250418;10.1109/VISUAL.2001.964519
DECT image fusion, local surface extraction, Dual Energy CT, metrology, dimensional measurement, variance comparison
Vis
2007
Texture-based feature tracking for effective time-varying data visualization
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70599
1. 1479
J
Analyzing, visualizing, and illustrating changes within time-varying volumetric data is challenging due to the dynamic changes occurring between timesteps. The changes and variations in computational fluid dynamic volumes and atmospheric 3D datasets do not follow any particular transformation. Features within the data move at different speeds and directions making the tracking and visualization of these features a difficult task. We introduce a texture-based feature tracking technique to overcome some of the current limitations found in the illustration and visualization of dynamic changes within time-varying volumetric data. Our texture-based technique tracks various features individually and then uses the tracked objects to better visualize structural changes. We show the effectiveness of our texture-based tracking technique with both synthetic and real world time-varying data. Furthermore, we highlight the specific visualization, annotation, registration, and feature isolation benefits of our technique. For instance, we show how our texture-based tracking can lead to insightful visualizations of time-varying data. Such visualizations, more than traditional visualization techniques, can assist domain scientists to explore and understand dynamic changes.
Caban, J.J.;Joshi, A.;Rheingans, P.
Univ. of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore|c|;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250374;10.1109/VISUAL.2000.885694;10.1109/VISUAL.1998.745288;10.1109/VISUAL.1996.567807
Feature tracking, texture-based analysis, flow visualization, time-varying data, visualization
Vis
2007
Tile-based Level of Detail for the Parallel Age
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70587
1. 1359
J
Today's PCs incorporate multiple CPUs and GPUs and are easily arranged in clusters for high-performance, interactive graphics. We present an approach based on hierarchical, screen-space tiles to parallelizing rendering with level of detail. Adapt tiles, render tiles, and machine tiles are associated with CPUs, GPUs, and PCs, respectively, to efficiently parallelize the workload with good resource utilization. Adaptive tile sizes provide load balancing while our level of detail system allows total and independent management of the load on CPUs and GPUs. We demonstrate our approach on parallel configurations consisting of both single PCs and a cluster of PCs.
Niski, K.;Cohen, J.D.
NVIDIA Corp., Santa Clara|c|;
10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532786
Geometric calibration, photometric calibration, tiled displays
Vis
2007
Time Dependent Processing in a Parallel Pipeline Architecture
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70600
1. 1383
J
Pipeline architectures provide a versatile and efficient mechanism for constructing visualizations, and they have been implemented in numerous libraries and applications over the past two decades. In addition to allowing developers and users to freely combine algorithms, visualization pipelines have proven to work well when streaming data and scale well on parallel distributed- memory computers. However, current pipeline visualization frameworks have a critical flaw: they are unable to manage time varying data. As data flows through the pipeline, each algorithm has access to only a single snapshot in time of the data. This prevents the implementation of algorithms that do any temporal processing such as particle tracing; plotting over time; or interpolation, fitting, or smoothing of time series data. As data acquisition technology improves, as simulation time-integration techniques become more complex, and as simulations save less frequently and regularly, the ability to analyze the time-behavior of data becomes more important. This paper describes a modification to the traditional pipeline architecture that allows it to accommodate temporal algorithms. Furthermore, the architecture allows temporal algorithms to be used in conjunction with algorithms expecting a single time snapshot, thus simplifying software design and allowing adoption into existing pipeline frameworks. Our architecture also continues to work well in parallel distributed-memory environments. We demonstrate our architecture by modifying the popular VTK framework and exposing the functionality to the ParaView application. We use this framework to apply time-dependent algorithms on large data with a parallel cluster computer and thereby exercise a functionality that previously did not exist.
Biddiscombe, J.;Geveci, B.;Martin, K.;Moreland, K.;Thompson, D.
Swiss Nat. Supercomput. Centre, Manno|c|;;;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532793;10.1109/VISUAL.1992.235219;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532795;10.1109/VISUAL.1991.175794;10.1109/VISUAL.2004.55;10.1109/INFVIS.2000.885092;10.1109/VISUAL.1995.480821
data-parallel visualization pipeline, time-varying data
Vis
2007
Topological Landscapes: A Terrain Metaphor for Scientific Data
10.1109/TVCG.2007.70601
1. 1423
J
Scientific visualization and illustration tools are designed to help people understand the structure and complexity of scientific data with images that are as informative and intuitive as possible. In this context the use of metaphors plays an important role since they make complex information easily accessible by using commonly known concepts. In this paper we propose a new metaphor, called "topological landscapes," which facilitates understanding the topological structure of scalar functions. The basic idea is to construct a terrain with the same topology as a given dataset and to display the terrain as an easily understood representation of the actual input data. In this projection from an n-dimensional scalar function to a two-dimensional (2D) model we preserve function values of critical points, the persistence (function span) of topological features, and one possible additional metric property (in our examples volume). By displaying this topologically equivalent landscape together with the original data we harness the natural human proficiency in understanding terrain topography and make complex topological information easily accessible.
Weber, G.H.;Bremer, P.-T.;Pascucci, V.
Lawrence Berkeley Nat. Lab., Berkeley|c|;;
10.1109/VISUAL.2004.96;10.1109/VISUAL.1998.745303;10.1109/VISUAL.1992.235215;10.1109/VISUAL.1999.809932;10.1109/INFVIS.2004.57;10.1109/VISUAL.1997.663860;10.1109/VISUAL.1997.663875;10.1109/INFVIS.2002.1173159;10.1109/VISUAL.2002.1183772;10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532839;10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250376
Feature Detection, User Interfaces, Visual Analytics, Contour Tree, Terrain, Topology, SOAR