54.73 Computergraphik
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- Bildverarbeitung (1)
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- Computergraphik (1)
- Contrast (1)
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Year of publication
- 2008 (2) (remove)
Multi-Frame Rate Rendering
(2008)
Multi-frame rate rendering is a parallel rendering technique that renders interactive parts of a scene on one graphics card while the rest of the scene is rendered asynchronously on a second graphics card. The resulting color and depth images of both render processes are composited, by optical superposition or digital composition, and displayed. The results of a user study confirm that multi-frame rate rendering can significantly improve the interaction performance. Multi-frame rate rendering is naturally implemented on a graphics cluster. With the recent availability of multiple graphics cards in standalone systems the method can also be implemented on a single computer system where memory bandwidth is much higher compared to off-the-shelf networking technology. This decreases overall latency and further improves interactivity. Multi-frame rate rendering was also investigated on a single graphics processor by interleaving the rendering streams for the interactive elements and the rest of the scene. This approach enables the use of multi-frame rate rendering on low-end graphics systems such as laptops, mobile phones, and PDAs. Advanced multi-frame rate rendering techniques reduce the limitations of the basic approach. The interactive manipulation of light sources and their parameters affects the entire scene. A multi-GPU deferred shading method is presented that splits the rendering task into a rasterization and lighting pass and assigns the passes to the appropriate image generators such that light manipulations at high frame rates become possible. A parallel volume rendering technique allows the manipulation of objects inside a translucent volume at high frame rates. This approach is useful for example in medical applications, where small probes need to be positioned inside a computed-tomography image. Due to the asynchronous nature of multi-frame rate rendering artifacts may occur during migration of objects from the slow to the fast graphics card, and vice versa. Proper state management allows to almost completely avoid these artifacts. Multi-frame rate rendering significantly improves the interactive manipulation of objects and lighting effects. This leads to a considerable increase of the size for 3D scenes that can be manipulated compared to conventional methods.
Superimposing Dynamic Range
(2008)
We present a simple and cost-efficient way of extending contrast, perceived tonal resolution, and the color space of static hardcopy images, beyond the capabilities of hardcopy devices or low-dynamic range displays alone. A calibrated projector-camera system is applied for automatic registration, scanning and superimposition of hardcopies. We explain how high-dynamic range content can be split for linear devices with different capabilities, how luminance quantization can be optimized with respect to the non-linear response of the human visual system as well as for the discrete nature of the applied modulation devices; and how inverse tone-mapping can be adapted in case only untreated hardcopies and softcopies (such as regular photographs) are available. We believe that our approach has the potential to complement hardcopy-based technologies, such as X-ray prints for filmless imaging, in domains that operate with high quality static image content, like radiology and other medical fields, or astronomy.