CGCVQMNov 8, 2021

Adaptive area-preserving parameterization of open and closed anatomical surfaces

arXiv:2111.04265v11 citations
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses the need for more accurate and flexible shape description in biomedical applications, offering an incremental improvement over existing parameterization techniques.

The paper tackles the problem of parameterizing anatomical surfaces with minimal distortion by proposing adaptive area-preserving methods that map surfaces to an optimal spherical cap, resulting in improved accuracy with lower area and angle distortion compared to existing methods.

The parameterization of open and closed anatomical surfaces is of fundamental importance in many biomedical applications. Spherical harmonics, a set of basis functions defined on the unit sphere, are widely used for anatomical shape description. However, establishing a one-to-one correspondence between the object surface and the entire unit sphere may induce a large geometric distortion in case the shape of the surface is too different from a perfect sphere. In this work, we propose adaptive area-preserving parameterization methods for simply-connected open and closed surfaces with the target of the parameterization being a spherical cap. Our methods optimize the shape of the parameter domain along with the mapping from the object surface to the parameter domain. The object surface will be globally mapped to an optimal spherical cap region of the unit sphere in an area-preserving manner while also exhibiting low conformal distortion. We further develop a set of spherical harmonics-like basis functions defined over the adaptive spherical cap domain, which we call the adaptive harmonics. Experimental results show that the proposed parameterization methods outperform the existing methods for both open and closed anatomical surfaces in terms of area and angle distortion. Surface description of the object surfaces can be effectively achieved using a novel combination of the adaptive parameterization and the adaptive harmonics. Our work provides a novel way of mapping anatomical surfaces with improved accuracy and greater flexibility. More broadly, the idea of using an adaptive parameter domain allows easy handling of a wide range of biomedical shapes.

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