Adaptive slices for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF

Abstract BRDF continues to be used as a fundamental tool for representing material appearance in computer graphics. In this paper we present a practical adaptive method for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF, based on sparse adaptive measurement of the complete four-dimensional BRDF space by means of o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Radomír Vávra, Jiří Filip
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-01-01
Series:Computational Visual Media
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41095-017-0099-z
id doaj-031267eef9e54cb89fb9b4caf70a1a8f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-031267eef9e54cb89fb9b4caf70a1a8f2020-11-25T00:44:06ZengSpringerOpenComputational Visual Media2096-04332096-06622018-01-0141556910.1007/s41095-017-0099-zAdaptive slices for acquisition of anisotropic BRDFRadomír Vávra0Jiří Filip1Institute of Information Theory and Automation of the CASInstitute of Information Theory and Automation of the CASAbstract BRDF continues to be used as a fundamental tool for representing material appearance in computer graphics. In this paper we present a practical adaptive method for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF, based on sparse adaptive measurement of the complete four-dimensional BRDF space by means of one-dimensional slices, which form a sparse four-dimensional structure in the BRDF space, and can be measured by continuous movements of a light source and sensor. Such a sampling approach is advantageous especially for gonioreflectometer-based measurement devices where the mechanical travel of a light source and a sensor imposes a significant time constraint. In order to evaluate our method, we have performed adaptive measurements of three materials and we simulated adaptive measurements of thirteen others. This method has one quarter the reconstruction error of that resulting from regular non-adaptive BRDF measurements using the same number of measured samples. Our method is almost twice as good as a previous adaptive method, and it requires from two to five times fewer samples to achieve the same results as alternative approaches.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41095-017-0099-zanisotropic BRDFslicesampling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Radomír Vávra
Jiří Filip
spellingShingle Radomír Vávra
Jiří Filip
Adaptive slices for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF
Computational Visual Media
anisotropic BRDF
slice
sampling
author_facet Radomír Vávra
Jiří Filip
author_sort Radomír Vávra
title Adaptive slices for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF
title_short Adaptive slices for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF
title_full Adaptive slices for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF
title_fullStr Adaptive slices for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive slices for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF
title_sort adaptive slices for acquisition of anisotropic brdf
publisher SpringerOpen
series Computational Visual Media
issn 2096-0433
2096-0662
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Abstract BRDF continues to be used as a fundamental tool for representing material appearance in computer graphics. In this paper we present a practical adaptive method for acquisition of anisotropic BRDF, based on sparse adaptive measurement of the complete four-dimensional BRDF space by means of one-dimensional slices, which form a sparse four-dimensional structure in the BRDF space, and can be measured by continuous movements of a light source and sensor. Such a sampling approach is advantageous especially for gonioreflectometer-based measurement devices where the mechanical travel of a light source and a sensor imposes a significant time constraint. In order to evaluate our method, we have performed adaptive measurements of three materials and we simulated adaptive measurements of thirteen others. This method has one quarter the reconstruction error of that resulting from regular non-adaptive BRDF measurements using the same number of measured samples. Our method is almost twice as good as a previous adaptive method, and it requires from two to five times fewer samples to achieve the same results as alternative approaches.
topic anisotropic BRDF
slice
sampling
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41095-017-0099-z
work_keys_str_mv AT radomirvavra adaptiveslicesforacquisitionofanisotropicbrdf
AT jirifilip adaptiveslicesforacquisitionofanisotropicbrdf
_version_ 1725276516472848384