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The theory, design, implementation and evaluation of a three-dimensional surface detection algorithm

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Published:01 July 1980Publication History

ABSTRACT

In many three-dimensional imaging applications the three-dimensional scene is represented by a three-dimensional array of volume elements, or voxels for short. A subset Q of the voxels is specified by some property. The objects in the scene are then defined as subsets of Q formed by voxels which are “connected” in some appropriate sense. It is often of interest to detect and display the surface of an object in the scene, specified say by one of the voxels in it.

In this paper, the problem of surface detection is translated into a problem of traversal of a directed graph, G. The nodes of G correspond to faces separating voxels in Q from voxels not in Q. It has been proven that connected subgraphs of G correspond to surfaces of connected components of Q (i.e., of objects in the scene). Further properties of the directed graph have been proven, which allow us to keep the number of marked nodes (needed to avoid loops in the graph traversal) to a small fraction of the total number of visited nodes.

This boundary detection algorithm has been implemented. We discuss the interaction between the underlying mathematical theory and the design of the working software. We illustrate the software on some clinical studies in which the input is computed tomographic (CT) data and the output is dynamically rotating three-dimensional displays of isolated organs. Even though the medical application leads to very large scale problems, our theory and design allows us to use our method routinely on the minicomputer of a CT scanner.

References

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              cover image ACM Conferences
              SIGGRAPH '80: Proceedings of the 7th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
              July 1980
              336 pages
              ISBN:0897910214
              DOI:10.1145/800250

              Copyright © 1980 ACM

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              Publication History

              • Published: 1 July 1980

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              SIGGRAPH '80 Paper Acceptance Rate52of140submissions,37%Overall Acceptance Rate1,822of8,601submissions,21%

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