Non-Photorealistic Computer Graphics Library

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Found 17 item(s) authored by "John P. Collomosse" .
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Article Rendering cartoon-style motion cues in post-production video
John P. Collomosse, D. Rowntree, Peter M. Hall.
Graphical Models, Vol. 67, No. 6, pp. 549--564, November, 2005. [BibTeX]

Article RTcams: A New Perspective on Nonphotorealistic Rendering from Photographs
Peter M. Hall, John P. Collomosse, Yi-Zhe Song, Peiyi Shen, Chuan Li.
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, Vol. 13, No. 5, pp. 966--979, Sept.-Oct., 2007. [BibTeX]

Article Salience-adaptive Painterly Rendering using Genetic Search
John P. Collomosse, Peter M. Hall.
Intl. Journal on Artificial Intelligence Tools (IJAIT), Vol. 14, No. 4, 2005. [BibTeX]

Technical Report Stroke Surfaces: A Spatio-temporal Framework for Temporally Coherent Non-photorealistic Animations

Author(s): John P. Collomosse, D. Rowntree, Peter M. Hall.
Technical Report: University of Bath, No. CSBU 2003-01, June, 2003.
[BibTeX] Find this paper on Google

Abstract:
We present a novel framework for the automated synthesis of non-photorealistic animations from video sequences. Our approach is unique in that we interpret the source video sequence as a spatio-temporal voxel volume, with time as the third dimension. Video frames are segmented into homogeneous regions, and heuristic associations between regions formed over time to produce a collection of conceptually high level spatio-temporal objects. These objects carve sub-volumes through the video volume delimited by continuous isosurface ``Stroke Surface'' patches. By manipulating objects in this representation we are able to synthesise a wide gamut of artistic effects, which we allow the user to stylise and influence through a parameterised ``Video Paintbox''. In addition to novel temporal effects unique to our method we demonstrate the extension of `traditional' static NPR styles to video including painterly, sketchy and 'toon shading effects. An application to advanced rotoscoping is also identified. The high level of analysis afforded by our spatio-temporal approach allows us to maintain a high degree of temporal coherence; a property scarce in current NPR video techniques which process video at a low level (on a per pixel, per frame sequential basis). The paper concludes with a critical appraisal and discussion of future applications for the Stroke Surface representation, including potential for video compression.


Article Stroke Surfaces: Temporally Coherent Artistic Animations from Video
John P. Collomosse, D. Rowntree, Peter M. Hall.
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, Vol. 11, No. 5, pp. 540--549, September/October, 2005. [BibTeX]

Proceedings Video Analysis for Cartoon-like Special Effects
John P. Collomosse, D. Rowntree, Peter M. Hall.
14th British Machine Vision Conference (BMVC), Vol. 2, pp. 749--758, Norwich, U.K., September, 2003. [BibTeX]

Article Video motion analysis for the synthesis of dynamic cues and Futurist art
John P. Collomosse, Peter M. Hall.
Graphical Models (Special Issue on the Vision, Video and Graphics Conference 2005), Vol. 68, No. 5-6, pp. 402--414, September-November, 2006. [BibTeX]

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