CVMar 12, 2014

3D Well-composed Polyhedral Complexes

arXiv:1403.2980v127 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a specific issue in computational topology and image processing for researchers, offering a novel local repair approach that is incremental compared to existing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of converting 3D binary images into well-composed forms while preserving topology, presenting a method that locally repairs cubical complexes to achieve homotopy equivalence and manifold boundaries without sub-sampling.

A binary three-dimensional (3D) image $I$ is well-composed if the boundary surface of its continuous analog is a 2D manifold. Since 3D images are not often well-composed, there are several voxel-based methods ("repairing" algorithms) for turning them into well-composed ones but these methods either do not guarantee the topological equivalence between the original image and its corresponding well-composed one or involve sub-sampling the whole image. In this paper, we present a method to locally "repair" the cubical complex $Q(I)$ (embedded in $\mathbb{R}^3$) associated to $I$ to obtain a polyhedral complex $P(I)$ homotopy equivalent to $Q(I)$ such that the boundary of every connected component of $P(I)$ is a 2D manifold. The reparation is performed via a new codification system for $P(I)$ under the form of a 3D grayscale image that allows an efficient access to cells and their faces.

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