Lingqi Yan

2papers

2 Papers

33.7GRMay 17
Macrofacet Theory for Gaussian Process Statistical Surfaces

Minghao Huang, Yuang Cui, Beibei Wang et al.

We present macrofacet theory to extend microfacet theory from the micro-space to the macro-space. This is achieved by transforming surfaces into volumetric representations that preserve microfacet characteristics. Therefore, we formulate a macroscopic microfacet model using a classic exponential participating medium. Meanwhile, we observe that traditional microfacet models are equivalent to Gaussian processes by definition but ignore the correlation along the geometric normal of the macro-surface. We extend microfacet theory to address this limitation. Our formulation represents Gaussian process implicit surfaces in a statistical manner, which we refer to as Gaussian process statistical surfaces. As a result, our approach converts Gaussian process statistical surfaces into classic exponential media to render surfaces, volumes and in-betweens without realizations. This enables efficient rendering and improves performance compared to realization-based approaches, while theoretically bridging microfacet models and Gaussian processes. Moreover, our approach is easy to implement.

GRDec 2, 2019
A Bayesian Inference Framework for Procedural Material Parameter Estimation

Yu Guo, Milos Hasan, Lingqi Yan et al.

Procedural material models have been gaining traction in many applications thanks to their flexibility, compactness, and easy editability. We explore the inverse rendering problem of procedural material parameter estimation from photographs, presenting a unified view of the problem in a Bayesian framework. In addition to computing point estimates of the parameters by optimization, our framework uses a Markov Chain Monte Carlo approach to sample the space of plausible material parameters, providing a collection of plausible matches that a user can choose from, and efficiently handling both discrete and continuous model parameters. To demonstrate the effectiveness of our framework, we fit procedural models of a range of materials---wall plaster, leather, wood, anisotropic brushed metals and layered metallic paints---to both synthetic and real target images.