5 research outputs found
Unwind: Interactive Fish Straightening
The ScanAllFish project is a large-scale effort to scan all the world's
33,100 known species of fishes. It has already generated thousands of
volumetric CT scans of fish species which are available on open access
platforms such as the Open Science Framework. To achieve a scanning rate
required for a project of this magnitude, many specimens are grouped together
into a single tube and scanned all at once. The resulting data contain many
fish which are often bent and twisted to fit into the scanner. Our system,
Unwind, is a novel interactive visualization and processing tool which
extracts, unbends, and untwists volumetric images of fish with minimal user
interaction. Our approach enables scientists to interactively unwarp these
volumes to remove the undesired torque and bending using a piecewise-linear
skeleton extracted by averaging isosurfaces of a harmonic function connecting
the head and tail of each fish. The result is a volumetric dataset of a
individual, straight fish in a canonical pose defined by the marine biologist
expert user. We have developed Unwind in collaboration with a team of marine
biologists: Our system has been deployed in their labs, and is presently being
used for dataset construction, biomechanical analysis, and the generation of
figures for scientific publication
UAVCAN Dataset Description
We collected attack data from unmanned vehicles using the UAVCAN protocol,
and public and described technical documents. A testbed was built with a drone
using PX4, and a total of three attacks, Flooding, Fuzzy, and Replay, were
performed. The attack was carried out in a total of 10 scenarios. We expect
that the attack data will help develop technologies such as anomaly detection
to solve the security threat problem of drones.Comment: in english languag
Efficient Ray Tracing Through Aspheric Lenses and Imperfect Bokeh Synthesis
We present an efficient ray-tracing technique to render bokeh effects produced by parametric aspheric lenses. Contrary to conventional spherical lenses, aspheric lenses do generally not permit a simple closed-form solution of ray-surface intersections. We propose a numerical root-finding approach, which uses tight proxy surfaces to ensure a good initialization and convergence behavior. Additionally, we simulate mechanical imperfections resulting from the lens fabrication via a texture-based approach. Fractional Fourier transform and spectral dispersion add additional realism to the synthesized bokeh effect. Our approach is well-suited for execution on graphics processing units (GPUs) and we demonstrate complex defocus-blur and lens-flare effects.Computer Graphics ForumLooking Through Surfaces35
