Fr. 134.00

Mathematical Foundations of Scientific Visualization, Computer Graphics, and Massive Data Exploration

English · Hardback

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Description

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The goal of visualization is the accurate, interactive, and intuitive presentation of data. Complex numerical simulations, high-resolution imaging devices and incre- ingly common environment-embedded sensors are the primary generators of m- sive data sets. Being able to derive scienti?c insight from data increasingly depends on having mathematical and perceptual models to provide the necessary foundation for effective data analysis and comprehension. The peer-reviewed state-of-the-art research papers included in this book focus on continuous data models, such as is common in medical imaging or computational modeling. From the viewpoint of a visualization scientist, we typically collaborate with an application scientist or engineer who needs to visually explore or study an object which is given by a set of sample points, which originally may or may not have been connected by a mesh. At some point, one generally employs low-order piecewise polynomial approximationsof an object, using one or several dependent functions. In order to have an understanding of a higher-dimensional geometrical "object" or function, ef?cient algorithms supporting real-time analysis and manipulation (- tation, zooming) are needed. Often, the data represents 3D or even time-varying 3D phenomena (such as medical data), and the access to different layers (slices) and structures (the underlying topology) comprising such data is needed.

List of contents

Maximizing Adaptivity in Hierarchical Topological Models Using Cancellation Trees.- The TOPORRERY: computation and presentation of multi-resolution topology.- Isocontour based Visualization of Time-varying Scalar Fields.- DeBruijn Counting for Visualization Algorithms.- Topological Methods for Visualizing Vortical Flows.- Stability and Computation of Medial Axes - a State-of-the-Art Report.- Local Geodesic Parametrization: an Ant's Perspective.- Tensor-Fields Visualization Using a Fabric-like Texture Applied to Arbitrary Two-dimensional Surfaces.- Flow Visualization via Partial Differential Equations.- Iterative Twofold Line Integral Convolution for Texture-Based Vector Field Visualization.- Constructing 3D Elliptical Gaussians for Irregular Data.- From Sphere Packing to the Theory of Optimal Lattice Sampling.- Reducing Interpolation Artifacts by Globally Fairing Contours.- Time- and Space-efficient Error Calculation for Multiresolution Direct Volume Rendering.- Massive Data Visualization: A Survey.- Compression and Occlusion Culling for Fast Isosurface Extraction from Massive Datasets.- Volume Visualization of Multiple Alignment of Large Genomic DNA.- Model-based Visualization - Computing Perceptually Optimal Visualizations.

Summary

The goal of visualization is the accurate, interactive, and intuitive presentation of data. Complex numerical simulations, high-resolution imaging devices and incre- ingly common environment-embedded sensors are the primary generators of m- sive data sets. Being able to derive scienti?c insight from data increasingly depends on having mathematical and perceptual models to provide the necessary foundation for effective data analysis and comprehension. The peer-reviewed state-of-the-art research papers included in this book focus on continuous data models, such as is common in medical imaging or computational modeling. From the viewpoint of a visualization scientist, we typically collaborate with an application scientist or engineer who needs to visually explore or study an object which is given by a set of sample points, which originally may or may not have been connected by a mesh. At some point, one generally employs low-order piecewise polynomial approximationsof an object, using one or several dependent functions. In order to have an understanding of a higher-dimensional geometrical “object” or function, ef?cient algorithms supporting real-time analysis and manipulation (- tation, zooming) are needed. Often, the data represents 3D or even time-varying 3D phenomena (such as medical data), and the access to different layers (slices) and structures (the underlying topology) comprising such data is needed.

Product details

Assisted by Robert D Russell (Editor), Bern Hamann (Editor), Bernd Hamann (Editor), Torsten Moller (Editor), Torsten Möller (Editor), Robert Russell (Editor), Robert D. Russell (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 26.06.2009
 
EAN 9783540250760
ISBN 978-3-540-25076-0
No. of pages 350
Dimensions 162 mm x 23 mm x 243 mm
Weight 722 g
Illustrations X, 350 p. 183 illus., 134 illus. in color.
Series Mathematics and Visualization
Mathematics and Visualization
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > IT, data processing > Application software

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