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Slices: A Shape-proxy Based on Planar Sections
James McCrae Karan Singh Niloy J. Mitra
University of Toronto KAUST/UCL
Abstract
Minimalist object representations or shape-proxies that spark and
inspire human perception of shape remain an incompletely under-
stood, yet powerful aspect of visual communication. We explore
the use of planar sections, i.e., the contours of intersection of planes
with a 3D object, for creating shape abstractions, motivated by their
popularity in art and engineering. We first perform a user study
to show that humans do define consistent and similar planar sec-
tion proxies for common objects. Interestingly, we observe a strong
correlation between user-defined planes and geometric features of
objects. Further we show that the problem of finding the minimum
set of planes that capture a set of 3D geometric shape features is
both NP-hard and not always the proxy a user would pick. Guided
by the principles inferred from our user study, we present an algo-
rithm that progressively selects planes to maximize feature cover-
age, which in turn influence the selection of subsequent planes. The
algorithmic framework easily incorporates various shape features,
while their relative importance values are computed and validated
from the user study data. We use our algorithm to compute pla-
nar slices for various objects, validate their utility towards object
abstraction using a second user study, and conclude showing the
potential applications of the extracted planar slice shape proxies.
Keywords: abstraction, shape proxy, shape perception
1 Introduction
Over the last few decades, great strides have been made in the area
of acquisition and modeling of 3D geometry. The underlying shape
representation is typically a collection of polygons, popular for their
generality, rendering efficiency, and amenability to geometry pro-
cessing algorithms. Unfortunately, such a representation can be ex-
pensive and, in itself, neither conveys the essence of the depicted
object nor aids in our understanding of the represented shape.
Artists and sculptors have long explored minimalist shape proxies
to highlight defining aspects of familiar objects (see Figure 2). As
humans, we effortlessly perceive the underlying shapes even from
such sectional representations, which greatly differ from their sur-
face representations. In fact, the sparse nature of these representa-
tions allows us to see otherwise occluded details and the absence of
unnecessary detail makes such artforms attractive, fascinating, and
sometimes mysterious. Evidence suggests that symbolic abstrac-
tions [Edwards 2002] dominate our mental model of objects. Thus
across cultures, we both recognize shape proxies quickly and tend
to communicate objects by drawing them as symbolic abstractions.
Planar section proxies are also motivated by medical and engineer-
ing visualization where section planes are used to illustrate the
interior details of complex shapes (see Figure 2). These planar-
sections often pass through anatomic landmarks or engineering fea-
tures such as channels or bosses, reaffirming our use of high-level
shape features like segments, symmetries, ridges and valleys to de-
fine planar sections in Section 4.
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