I will present an overview of a project to capture and use
digital models of museum artifacts for the purposes
of education and public information. I will begin by
describing the original design of a 3D scanning system now
in use in Cairoâs Egyptian Museum. The system captures
both the geometry and surface color and detail of museum
artifacts. I will report on the experience using the system
and present samples of how the processed 3D data will be used
on a web site designed to communicate Egyptian culture.
One of the greatest problems that we have faced in
the project is the need to have edits on complex 3D objects
specified by non-technical end-users such as historians.
I will present a new approach we are exploring in which we
convert the problem of editing a 3D object of arbitrary size
and surface properties to a problem of editing a 2D image.
We allow the user to specify small edits in both geometry and surface
properties from any view and at any resolution they find
convenient, regardless of the interactive rendering capability
of their computer. We believe a purely image-based approach
to 3D editing offers the potential to make graphics tools available
to a wider population of end-users.
Date and Time
Wednesday November 5, 2003 4:00pm -
5:30pm
Location
Computer Science Small Auditorium (Room 105)
Event Type
Speaker
Holly Rushmeier, from IBM TJ Watson Research Laboratory
Host
Thomas Funkhouser