DocumentCode
2413999
Title
Illustrative rendering techniques for visualization: Future of visualization or just another technique?
Author
Bartz, Daniel ; Hagen, H. ; Interrante, Victoria ; Kwan-Liu Ma ; Preim, Bernhard
fYear
2005
fDate
23-28 Oct. 2005
Firstpage
715
Lastpage
718
Abstract
Illustrative rendering, often also depicted as non-photorealistic rendering1 or stylized rendering, employs abstraction techniques to convey the relevant information, and de-emphasize less important details. The question remains how this abstraction process is guided and in particular how can we ensure that relevant information is maintained. Consequently, research on illustrative rendering needs to address how the information is perceived by the human observer, next to the investigation of algorithmic aspects. In this panel, we discuss various aspects on this topic. Kwan-Liu Ma discusses how illustrative rendering can be used in scientifc visualization, and Bernhard Preim explores its use for the visualization in the medical imaging domain. Perception aspects are presented by Victoria Interrante. A different perspective, if illustrative rendering is useful for typical visualization problems, is added by Hans Hagen.
Keywords
Abdomen; Biomedical imaging; Colon; Computer science; Head; Rendering (computer graphics); Skeleton; Skin; Skull; Visualization;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Visualization, 2005. VIS 05. IEEE
Conference_Location
Minneapolis, MN
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9462-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/VISUAL.2005.1532863
Filename
1532863
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