- •Preface
- •Biological Vision Systems
- •Visual Representations from Paintings to Photographs
- •Computer Vision
- •The Limitations of Standard 2D Images
- •3D Imaging, Analysis and Applications
- •Book Objective and Content
- •Acknowledgements
- •Contents
- •Contributors
- •2.1 Introduction
- •Chapter Outline
- •2.2 An Overview of Passive 3D Imaging Systems
- •2.2.1 Multiple View Approaches
- •2.2.2 Single View Approaches
- •2.3 Camera Modeling
- •2.3.1 Homogeneous Coordinates
- •2.3.2 Perspective Projection Camera Model
- •2.3.2.1 Camera Modeling: The Coordinate Transformation
- •2.3.2.2 Camera Modeling: Perspective Projection
- •2.3.2.3 Camera Modeling: Image Sampling
- •2.3.2.4 Camera Modeling: Concatenating the Projective Mappings
- •2.3.3 Radial Distortion
- •2.4 Camera Calibration
- •2.4.1 Estimation of a Scene-to-Image Planar Homography
- •2.4.2 Basic Calibration
- •2.4.3 Refined Calibration
- •2.4.4 Calibration of a Stereo Rig
- •2.5 Two-View Geometry
- •2.5.1 Epipolar Geometry
- •2.5.2 Essential and Fundamental Matrices
- •2.5.3 The Fundamental Matrix for Pure Translation
- •2.5.4 Computation of the Fundamental Matrix
- •2.5.5 Two Views Separated by a Pure Rotation
- •2.5.6 Two Views of a Planar Scene
- •2.6 Rectification
- •2.6.1 Rectification with Calibration Information
- •2.6.2 Rectification Without Calibration Information
- •2.7 Finding Correspondences
- •2.7.1 Correlation-Based Methods
- •2.7.2 Feature-Based Methods
- •2.8 3D Reconstruction
- •2.8.1 Stereo
- •2.8.1.1 Dense Stereo Matching
- •2.8.1.2 Triangulation
- •2.8.2 Structure from Motion
- •2.9 Passive Multiple-View 3D Imaging Systems
- •2.9.1 Stereo Cameras
- •2.9.2 3D Modeling
- •2.9.3 Mobile Robot Localization and Mapping
- •2.10 Passive Versus Active 3D Imaging Systems
- •2.11 Concluding Remarks
- •2.12 Further Reading
- •2.13 Questions
- •2.14 Exercises
- •References
- •3.1 Introduction
- •3.1.1 Historical Context
- •3.1.2 Basic Measurement Principles
- •3.1.3 Active Triangulation-Based Methods
- •3.1.4 Chapter Outline
- •3.2 Spot Scanners
- •3.2.1 Spot Position Detection
- •3.3 Stripe Scanners
- •3.3.1 Camera Model
- •3.3.2 Sheet-of-Light Projector Model
- •3.3.3 Triangulation for Stripe Scanners
- •3.4 Area-Based Structured Light Systems
- •3.4.1 Gray Code Methods
- •3.4.1.1 Decoding of Binary Fringe-Based Codes
- •3.4.1.2 Advantage of the Gray Code
- •3.4.2 Phase Shift Methods
- •3.4.2.1 Removing the Phase Ambiguity
- •3.4.3 Triangulation for a Structured Light System
- •3.5 System Calibration
- •3.6 Measurement Uncertainty
- •3.6.1 Uncertainty Related to the Phase Shift Algorithm
- •3.6.2 Uncertainty Related to Intrinsic Parameters
- •3.6.3 Uncertainty Related to Extrinsic Parameters
- •3.6.4 Uncertainty as a Design Tool
- •3.7 Experimental Characterization of 3D Imaging Systems
- •3.7.1 Low-Level Characterization
- •3.7.2 System-Level Characterization
- •3.7.3 Characterization of Errors Caused by Surface Properties
- •3.7.4 Application-Based Characterization
- •3.8 Selected Advanced Topics
- •3.8.1 Thin Lens Equation
- •3.8.2 Depth of Field
- •3.8.3 Scheimpflug Condition
- •3.8.4 Speckle and Uncertainty
- •3.8.5 Laser Depth of Field
- •3.8.6 Lateral Resolution
- •3.9 Research Challenges
- •3.10 Concluding Remarks
- •3.11 Further Reading
- •3.12 Questions
- •3.13 Exercises
- •References
- •4.1 Introduction
- •Chapter Outline
- •4.2 Representation of 3D Data
- •4.2.1 Raw Data
- •4.2.1.1 Point Cloud
- •4.2.1.2 Structured Point Cloud
- •4.2.1.3 Depth Maps and Range Images
- •4.2.1.4 Needle map
- •4.2.1.5 Polygon Soup
- •4.2.2 Surface Representations
- •4.2.2.1 Triangular Mesh
- •4.2.2.2 Quadrilateral Mesh
- •4.2.2.3 Subdivision Surfaces
- •4.2.2.4 Morphable Model
- •4.2.2.5 Implicit Surface
- •4.2.2.6 Parametric Surface
- •4.2.2.7 Comparison of Surface Representations
- •4.2.3 Solid-Based Representations
- •4.2.3.1 Voxels
- •4.2.3.3 Binary Space Partitioning
- •4.2.3.4 Constructive Solid Geometry
- •4.2.3.5 Boundary Representations
- •4.2.4 Summary of Solid-Based Representations
- •4.3 Polygon Meshes
- •4.3.1 Mesh Storage
- •4.3.2 Mesh Data Structures
- •4.3.2.1 Halfedge Structure
- •4.4 Subdivision Surfaces
- •4.4.1 Doo-Sabin Scheme
- •4.4.2 Catmull-Clark Scheme
- •4.4.3 Loop Scheme
- •4.5 Local Differential Properties
- •4.5.1 Surface Normals
- •4.5.2 Differential Coordinates and the Mesh Laplacian
- •4.6 Compression and Levels of Detail
- •4.6.1 Mesh Simplification
- •4.6.1.1 Edge Collapse
- •4.6.1.2 Quadric Error Metric
- •4.6.2 QEM Simplification Summary
- •4.6.3 Surface Simplification Results
- •4.7 Visualization
- •4.8 Research Challenges
- •4.9 Concluding Remarks
- •4.10 Further Reading
- •4.11 Questions
- •4.12 Exercises
- •References
- •1.1 Introduction
- •Chapter Outline
- •1.2 A Historical Perspective on 3D Imaging
- •1.2.1 Image Formation and Image Capture
- •1.2.2 Binocular Perception of Depth
- •1.2.3 Stereoscopic Displays
- •1.3 The Development of Computer Vision
- •1.3.1 Further Reading in Computer Vision
- •1.4 Acquisition Techniques for 3D Imaging
- •1.4.1 Passive 3D Imaging
- •1.4.2 Active 3D Imaging
- •1.4.3 Passive Stereo Versus Active Stereo Imaging
- •1.5 Twelve Milestones in 3D Imaging and Shape Analysis
- •1.5.1 Active 3D Imaging: An Early Optical Triangulation System
- •1.5.2 Passive 3D Imaging: An Early Stereo System
- •1.5.3 Passive 3D Imaging: The Essential Matrix
- •1.5.4 Model Fitting: The RANSAC Approach to Feature Correspondence Analysis
- •1.5.5 Active 3D Imaging: Advances in Scanning Geometries
- •1.5.6 3D Registration: Rigid Transformation Estimation from 3D Correspondences
- •1.5.7 3D Registration: Iterative Closest Points
- •1.5.9 3D Local Shape Descriptors: Spin Images
- •1.5.10 Passive 3D Imaging: Flexible Camera Calibration
- •1.5.11 3D Shape Matching: Heat Kernel Signatures
- •1.6 Applications of 3D Imaging
- •1.7 Book Outline
- •1.7.1 Part I: 3D Imaging and Shape Representation
- •1.7.2 Part II: 3D Shape Analysis and Processing
- •1.7.3 Part III: 3D Imaging Applications
- •References
- •5.1 Introduction
- •5.1.1 Applications
- •5.1.2 Chapter Outline
- •5.2 Mathematical Background
- •5.2.1 Differential Geometry
- •5.2.2 Curvature of Two-Dimensional Surfaces
- •5.2.3 Discrete Differential Geometry
- •5.2.4 Diffusion Geometry
- •5.2.5 Discrete Diffusion Geometry
- •5.3 Feature Detectors
- •5.3.1 A Taxonomy
- •5.3.2 Harris 3D
- •5.3.3 Mesh DOG
- •5.3.4 Salient Features
- •5.3.5 Heat Kernel Features
- •5.3.6 Topological Features
- •5.3.7 Maximally Stable Components
- •5.3.8 Benchmarks
- •5.4 Feature Descriptors
- •5.4.1 A Taxonomy
- •5.4.2 Curvature-Based Descriptors (HK and SC)
- •5.4.3 Spin Images
- •5.4.4 Shape Context
- •5.4.5 Integral Volume Descriptor
- •5.4.6 Mesh Histogram of Gradients (HOG)
- •5.4.7 Heat Kernel Signature (HKS)
- •5.4.8 Scale-Invariant Heat Kernel Signature (SI-HKS)
- •5.4.9 Color Heat Kernel Signature (CHKS)
- •5.4.10 Volumetric Heat Kernel Signature (VHKS)
- •5.5 Research Challenges
- •5.6 Conclusions
- •5.7 Further Reading
- •5.8 Questions
- •5.9 Exercises
- •References
- •6.1 Introduction
- •Chapter Outline
- •6.2 Registration of Two Views
- •6.2.1 Problem Statement
- •6.2.2 The Iterative Closest Points (ICP) Algorithm
- •6.2.3 ICP Extensions
- •6.2.3.1 Techniques for Pre-alignment
- •Global Approaches
- •Local Approaches
- •6.2.3.2 Techniques for Improving Speed
- •Subsampling
- •Closest Point Computation
- •Distance Formulation
- •6.2.3.3 Techniques for Improving Accuracy
- •Outlier Rejection
- •Additional Information
- •Probabilistic Methods
- •6.3 Advanced Techniques
- •6.3.1 Registration of More than Two Views
- •Reducing Error Accumulation
- •Automating Registration
- •6.3.2 Registration in Cluttered Scenes
- •Point Signatures
- •Matching Methods
- •6.3.3 Deformable Registration
- •Methods Based on General Optimization Techniques
- •Probabilistic Methods
- •6.3.4 Machine Learning Techniques
- •Improving the Matching
- •Object Detection
- •6.4 Quantitative Performance Evaluation
- •6.5 Case Study 1: Pairwise Alignment with Outlier Rejection
- •6.6 Case Study 2: ICP with Levenberg-Marquardt
- •6.6.1 The LM-ICP Method
- •6.6.2 Computing the Derivatives
- •6.6.3 The Case of Quaternions
- •6.6.4 Summary of the LM-ICP Algorithm
- •6.6.5 Results and Discussion
- •6.7 Case Study 3: Deformable ICP with Levenberg-Marquardt
- •6.7.1 Surface Representation
- •6.7.2 Cost Function
- •Data Term: Global Surface Attraction
- •Data Term: Boundary Attraction
- •Penalty Term: Spatial Smoothness
- •Penalty Term: Temporal Smoothness
- •6.7.3 Minimization Procedure
- •6.7.4 Summary of the Algorithm
- •6.7.5 Experiments
- •6.8 Research Challenges
- •6.9 Concluding Remarks
- •6.10 Further Reading
- •6.11 Questions
- •6.12 Exercises
- •References
- •7.1 Introduction
- •7.1.1 Retrieval and Recognition Evaluation
- •7.1.2 Chapter Outline
- •7.2 Literature Review
- •7.3 3D Shape Retrieval Techniques
- •7.3.1 Depth-Buffer Descriptor
- •7.3.1.1 Computing the 2D Projections
- •7.3.1.2 Obtaining the Feature Vector
- •7.3.1.3 Evaluation
- •7.3.1.4 Complexity Analysis
- •7.3.2 Spin Images for Object Recognition
- •7.3.2.1 Matching
- •7.3.2.2 Evaluation
- •7.3.2.3 Complexity Analysis
- •7.3.3 Salient Spectral Geometric Features
- •7.3.3.1 Feature Points Detection
- •7.3.3.2 Local Descriptors
- •7.3.3.3 Shape Matching
- •7.3.3.4 Evaluation
- •7.3.3.5 Complexity Analysis
- •7.3.4 Heat Kernel Signatures
- •7.3.4.1 Evaluation
- •7.3.4.2 Complexity Analysis
- •7.4 Research Challenges
- •7.5 Concluding Remarks
- •7.6 Further Reading
- •7.7 Questions
- •7.8 Exercises
- •References
- •8.1 Introduction
- •Chapter Outline
- •8.2 3D Face Scan Representation and Visualization
- •8.3 3D Face Datasets
- •8.3.1 FRGC v2 3D Face Dataset
- •8.3.2 The Bosphorus Dataset
- •8.4 3D Face Recognition Evaluation
- •8.4.1 Face Verification
- •8.4.2 Face Identification
- •8.5 Processing Stages in 3D Face Recognition
- •8.5.1 Face Detection and Segmentation
- •8.5.2 Removal of Spikes
- •8.5.3 Filling of Holes and Missing Data
- •8.5.4 Removal of Noise
- •8.5.5 Fiducial Point Localization and Pose Correction
- •8.5.6 Spatial Resampling
- •8.5.7 Feature Extraction on Facial Surfaces
- •8.5.8 Classifiers for 3D Face Matching
- •8.6 ICP-Based 3D Face Recognition
- •8.6.1 ICP Outline
- •8.6.2 A Critical Discussion of ICP
- •8.6.3 A Typical ICP-Based 3D Face Recognition Implementation
- •8.6.4 ICP Variants and Other Surface Registration Approaches
- •8.7 PCA-Based 3D Face Recognition
- •8.7.1 PCA System Training
- •8.7.2 PCA Training Using Singular Value Decomposition
- •8.7.3 PCA Testing
- •8.7.4 PCA Performance
- •8.8 LDA-Based 3D Face Recognition
- •8.8.1 Two-Class LDA
- •8.8.2 LDA with More than Two Classes
- •8.8.3 LDA in High Dimensional 3D Face Spaces
- •8.8.4 LDA Performance
- •8.9 Normals and Curvature in 3D Face Recognition
- •8.9.1 Computing Curvature on a 3D Face Scan
- •8.10 Recent Techniques in 3D Face Recognition
- •8.10.1 3D Face Recognition Using Annotated Face Models (AFM)
- •8.10.2 Local Feature-Based 3D Face Recognition
- •8.10.2.1 Keypoint Detection and Local Feature Matching
- •8.10.2.2 Other Local Feature-Based Methods
- •8.10.3 Expression Modeling for Invariant 3D Face Recognition
- •8.10.3.1 Other Expression Modeling Approaches
- •8.11 Research Challenges
- •8.12 Concluding Remarks
- •8.13 Further Reading
- •8.14 Questions
- •8.15 Exercises
- •References
- •9.1 Introduction
- •Chapter Outline
- •9.2 DEM Generation from Stereoscopic Imagery
- •9.2.1 Stereoscopic DEM Generation: Literature Review
- •9.2.2 Accuracy Evaluation of DEMs
- •9.2.3 An Example of DEM Generation from SPOT-5 Imagery
- •9.3 DEM Generation from InSAR
- •9.3.1 Techniques for DEM Generation from InSAR
- •9.3.1.1 Basic Principle of InSAR in Elevation Measurement
- •9.3.1.2 Processing Stages of DEM Generation from InSAR
- •The Branch-Cut Method of Phase Unwrapping
- •The Least Squares (LS) Method of Phase Unwrapping
- •9.3.2 Accuracy Analysis of DEMs Generated from InSAR
- •9.3.3 Examples of DEM Generation from InSAR
- •9.4 DEM Generation from LIDAR
- •9.4.1 LIDAR Data Acquisition
- •9.4.2 Accuracy, Error Types and Countermeasures
- •9.4.3 LIDAR Interpolation
- •9.4.4 LIDAR Filtering
- •9.4.5 DTM from Statistical Properties of the Point Cloud
- •9.5 Research Challenges
- •9.6 Concluding Remarks
- •9.7 Further Reading
- •9.8 Questions
- •9.9 Exercises
- •References
- •10.1 Introduction
- •10.1.1 Allometric Modeling of Biomass
- •10.1.2 Chapter Outline
- •10.2 Aerial Photo Mensuration
- •10.2.1 Principles of Aerial Photogrammetry
- •10.2.1.1 Geometric Basis of Photogrammetric Measurement
- •10.2.1.2 Ground Control and Direct Georeferencing
- •10.2.2 Tree Height Measurement Using Forest Photogrammetry
- •10.2.2.2 Automated Methods in Forest Photogrammetry
- •10.3 Airborne Laser Scanning
- •10.3.1 Principles of Airborne Laser Scanning
- •10.3.1.1 Lidar-Based Measurement of Terrain and Canopy Surfaces
- •10.3.2 Individual Tree-Level Measurement Using Lidar
- •10.3.2.1 Automated Individual Tree Measurement Using Lidar
- •10.3.3 Area-Based Approach to Estimating Biomass with Lidar
- •10.4 Future Developments
- •10.5 Concluding Remarks
- •10.6 Further Reading
- •10.7 Questions
- •References
- •11.1 Introduction
- •Chapter Outline
- •11.2 Volumetric Data Acquisition
- •11.2.1 Computed Tomography
- •11.2.1.1 Characteristics of 3D CT Data
- •11.2.2 Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
- •11.2.2.1 Characteristics of 3D PET Data
- •Relaxation
- •11.2.3.1 Characteristics of the 3D MRI Data
- •Image Quality and Artifacts
- •11.2.4 Summary
- •11.3 Surface Extraction and Volumetric Visualization
- •11.3.1 Surface Extraction
- •Example: Curvatures and Geometric Tools
- •11.3.2 Volume Rendering
- •11.3.3 Summary
- •11.4 Volumetric Image Registration
- •11.4.1 A Hierarchy of Transformations
- •11.4.1.1 Rigid Body Transformation
- •11.4.1.2 Similarity Transformations and Anisotropic Scaling
- •11.4.1.3 Affine Transformations
- •11.4.1.4 Perspective Transformations
- •11.4.1.5 Non-rigid Transformations
- •11.4.2 Points and Features Used for the Registration
- •11.4.2.1 Landmark Features
- •11.4.2.2 Surface-Based Registration
- •11.4.2.3 Intensity-Based Registration
- •11.4.3 Registration Optimization
- •11.4.3.1 Estimation of Registration Errors
- •11.4.4 Summary
- •11.5 Segmentation
- •11.5.1 Semi-automatic Methods
- •11.5.1.1 Thresholding
- •11.5.1.2 Region Growing
- •11.5.1.3 Deformable Models
- •Snakes
- •Balloons
- •11.5.2 Fully Automatic Methods
- •11.5.2.1 Atlas-Based Segmentation
- •11.5.2.2 Statistical Shape Modeling and Analysis
- •11.5.3 Summary
- •11.6 Diffusion Imaging: An Illustration of a Full Pipeline
- •11.6.1 From Scalar Images to Tensors
- •11.6.2 From Tensor Image to Information
- •11.6.3 Summary
- •11.7 Applications
- •11.7.1 Diagnosis and Morphometry
- •11.7.2 Simulation and Training
- •11.7.3 Surgical Planning and Guidance
- •11.7.4 Summary
- •11.8 Concluding Remarks
- •11.9 Research Challenges
- •11.10 Further Reading
- •Data Acquisition
- •Surface Extraction
- •Volume Registration
- •Segmentation
- •Diffusion Imaging
- •Software
- •11.11 Questions
- •11.12 Exercises
- •References
- •Index
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7.3.1 Depth-Buffer Descriptor
The depth-buffer descriptor [106] is an image-based descriptor. It computes 2D projections of the 3D model, and then computes its feature vector from the obtained projections. This descriptor considers not only the silhouette of each projection of the 3D model, but also considers the depth information (distance from the clipping plane, where the projection starts, to the 3D model).
The process to obtain the feature vector associated to the depth-buffer descriptor is summarized as follows.
1.Pose normalization: The depth-buffer descriptor starts with the 3D model oriented and scaled according to a predefined normalized pose.
2.Depth buffer construction: The feature extraction method renders six greyscale images using parallel projection (two projections for each principal axis). Each pixel in the 2D projection encodes, to an 8-bit grey value, the orthogonal distance from the viewing plane (i.e. sides of the bounding cube) to the object. These images correspond to the concept of z- or depth-buffers in computer graphics.
3.Fourier transformation: After rendering, the method transforms the six images using the standard 2D discrete Fourier transform.
4.Selection of coefficients: The magnitudes of certain k low-frequency coefficients of each image contribute to the depth-buffer feature vector of dimensionality 6k.
7.3.1.1 Computing the 2D Projections
The first step of the depth-buffer descriptor computes 2D projections of the 3D model. To accomplish this, the model must be first normalized in pose (by means of PCA analysis, for example), as this descriptor is not inherently invariant to rotations or scaling. Then, the model must be enclosed in a bounding cube. Each face of this cube is divided into n × n cells (with initial value 0), which will be used to compute the depth-buffers for each 2D projection. Finally, the 3D model is orthogonally projected to the face of the bounding cube. The value associated to each cell is the normalized orthogonal distance (a value in [0, 1]) between the face of the bounding cube and the closest point (orthogonally) in the 3D model.
Formally, let w be the width of the bounding cube. If a point p belongs to the surface of the 3D model, its closest orthogonal cell in the face of the bounding cube is c, and p is the closest point in the mesh to c, the associated value of c is
value(c) = w − δ(c, p) , w
where δ(c, p) is the distance from c to p.
This method works well if the 3D model does not contain a significant number of outliers. Otherwise, the faces of the bounding cube may be too far to the actual
7 3D Shape Matching for Retrieval and Recognition |
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surface of the 3D model (it will only be close to the few outliers). This will result in the values of almost all cells in a face of the bounding cube being similar, except for the outliers, thus affecting the computation of the descriptor.
To avoid this problem, Vranic [106] suggests using a canonical cube that does not necessarily enclose the 3D model. The canonical cube is defined by a parameter t > 0, such that the vertices of this cube correspond to (x, y, z)|x, y, z {−t, t }. The part of the 3D model that lies outside the canonical cube is not used for computing the descriptor, thus any outlier point will be effectively ignored.
7.3.1.2 Obtaining the Feature Vector
The values associated with the cells on each face of the bounding box could be directly used as the attributes for the feature vector. This feature vector would have a dimensionality of 6n2. However, such a descriptor may lead to poor retrieval effectiveness [106]. Instead, the depth-buffer descriptor transforms the values in the spatial domain to the frequency space. Then, it selects some of the obtained coefficients to form the final descriptor.
The depth-buffer descriptor computes the 2D discrete Fourier transform for each of the depth-buffers. Briefly, the 2D discrete Fourier transform of a sequence of two-dimensional complex numbers of equal length (n in our case) is defined as
n−1 n−1
F (u, v) = 1 f (x, y)e−2π i(xu+yv)/n
n x=0 y=0
where f (x, y), 0 ≤ x, y ≤ n − 1 is the value of the cell defined by the tuple (x, y). With this definition, it is easy to recover the original values f (x, y):
n−1 n−1
f (x, y) = 1 F (u, v)e2π i(xu+yv)/n.
n u=0 v=0
The presented formula for F (u, v) takes O(n4) time (O(n2) operations must be applied for each cell of the n × n grid), and it must be computed for each face of the bounding cube, thus it is computationally expensive. However, if n is a power of two, the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) can be applied to speed the computation of the coefficients, reducing the time complexity to O(n2 log n). For this purpose, Vranic [106] recommends setting n = 256.
Before computing the Fourier coefficients, the value f (0, 0) is aligned with the cell (n/2, n/2). In this way, the computed low frequency Fourier coefficients correspond to those located in the middle of the resultant image (pixels with values F (u, v)). As the inputs of the 2D discrete Fourier transform are real values, the obtained coefficients satisfy a symmetry property:
F (u, v) = F (u, v), u + u mod n = v + v mod n = 0,
where F (u, v) is the complex conjugate of F (u , v ).
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Fig. 7.2 Depth-buffer renderings. The top row shows the depth buffers of the 3D model. The bottom row shows their coefficient magnitudes of the 2D Fourier transform. Figure courtesy of [27]
After computing the Fourier coefficients, the final depth-buffer descriptor is formed as follows. First, one needs to set a parameter value k N. Then, a set of values p and q are computed, such that they hold the inequality
|p − n/2| + |q − n/2| ≤ k ≤ n/2.
The absolute values of the coefficients F (p, q) corresponds to the attributes of the final feature vector. It follows that the number of considered coefficients is k2 + k + 1. As we must repeat this process for each face of the bounding cube, the final dimensionality of the descriptor is 6(k2 + k + 1). Vranic [106] recommends setting k = 8, thus obtaining a feature vector of 438 dimensions.
Figure 7.2 shows the depth buffer renderings for a 3D model of a car. The first row of images shows the depth buffers of the 3D model. Darker pixels indicate that the distance between the view plane and the object is smaller than at brighter pixels. The second row shows coefficient magnitudes of the 2D Fourier transform of the six images.
7.3.1.3 Evaluation
The effectiveness of the depth-buffer descriptor was compared with several featurebased descriptors for 3D model retrieval [27]. The experimental evaluation showed that descriptors based on 2D projections of the 3D model can be more effective than other global descriptors. In particular, the depth-buffer descriptor got the highest average effectiveness among all descriptors, for queries in a heterogeneous 3D model dataset (Konstanz 3D Model Database). The dataset contained 1838 3D objects collected from the Internet. From the entire collection, 472 objects were used as queries and these contained a manual classification. Table 7.3 shows the results obtained in the experiments. In this case, the R-Precision measure was used in the evaluation.
An advantage of the depth-buffer technique is its low computational cost. In addition, regarding global retrieval, it is the technique with the best effectiveness. However, as can be noted, this method is not suitable to overcome problems such as partial matching and non-rigid retrieval. For more details about the evaluated techniques, we refer the reader to the original paper.