Non-Photorealistic Computer Graphics Library

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Found 40 item(s) of type "PhD Thesis".
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PhD Thesis Dynamic Presentations for Illustration Purposes
Roland Jesse.
Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg, March, 2004. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Enhanced Visual Authoring Using Operation History
Sara L. Su.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2009. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Fast Techniques for Non Photorealistic Rendering
G. Di Blasi.
University of Catania, Italy, 2006. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Frame-Coherent 3D Stippling for Non-Photorealistic Computer Graphics
Oscar E. Meruvia Pastor.
Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg, Germany, 2003. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis High-Quality Visualization and Filtering of Textures and Segmented Volume Data on Consumer Graphics Hardware
Markus Hadwiger.
VRVis Research Center and Institute of Computer Graphics and Algorithms, Vienna University of Technology, 2004. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Higher Level Techniques for the Artistic Rendering of Images and Video
John P. Collomosse.
University of Bath, UK, May, 2004. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Human Facial Illustrations: Creation and Evaluation using Behavioral Studies and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Bruce Gooch.
University of Utah, July, 2003. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Hybrid Sketching: A New Middle Ground Between 2- and 3-D.

Author(s): John Alex.
PhD Thesis: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2005.
[BibTeX] Find this paper on Google

Abstract:
This thesis investigates the geometric representation of ideas during the early stages of design. When a designer’s ideas are still in gestation, the exploration of form is more important than its precise specification. Digital modelers facilitate such exploration, but only for forms built with discrete collections of high-level geometric primitives; we introduce techniques that operate on designers’ medium of choice, 2-D sketches. Designers’ explorations also shift between 2-D and 3-D, yet 3-D form must also be specified with these high-level primitives, requiring an entirely different mindset from 2-D sketching. We introduce a new approach to transform existing 2-D sketches directly into a new kind of sketch-like 3-D model. Finally, we present a novel sketching technique that removes the distinction between 2-D and 3-D altogether. This thesis makes five contributions: point-dragging and curve-drawing techniques for editing sketches; two techniques to help designers bring 2-D sketches to 3-D; and a sketching interface that dissolves the boundaries between 2-D and 3-D representation. The first two contributions of this thesis introduce smooth exploration techniques that work on sketched form composed of strokes, in 2-D or 3-D. First, we present a technique, inspired by classical painting practices, whereby the designer can explore a range of curves with a single stroke. As the user draws near an existing curve, our technique automatically and interactively replaces sections of the old curve with the new one. Second, we present a method to enable smooth exploration of sketched form by point-dragging. The user constructs a high-level “proxy” description that can be used, somewhat like a skeleton, to deform a sketch independent of the internal stroke description. Next, we leverage the proxy deformation capability to help the designer move directly from existing 2-D sketches to 3-D models. Our reconstruction techniques generate a novel kind of 3-D model which maintains the appearance and stroke structure of the original 2-D sketch. One technique transforms a single sketch with help from annotations by the designer; the other combines two sketches. Since these interfaces are user-guided, they can operate on ambiguous sketches, relying on the designer to choose an interpretation. Finally, we present an interface to build an even sparser, more suggestive, type of 3-D model, either from existing sketches or from scratch. “Camera planes” provide a complex 3-D scaffolding on which to hang sketches, which can still be drawn as rapidly and freely as before. A sparse set of 2-D sketches placed on planes provides a novel visualization of 3-D form, with enough information present to suggest 3-D shape, but enough missing that the designer can ‘read into’ the form, seeing multiple possibilities. This unspecified information - this empty space - can spur the designer on to new ideas.

PhD Thesis Illustrating Transparency: communicating the 3D shape of layered transparent surfaces via texture
Victoria Interrante.
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 1996. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Image-Based Pen-and-Ink Illustration
Michael P. Salisbury.
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, 1997. [BibTeX]

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