Abstract:In this paper, we present the SHIVA project which was designed to provide virtual sculpting tools for young people with complex disabilities, to allow them to engage with artistic and creative activities that they might otherwise never be able to access. Modern 3D printing then allows us to physically build their creations. To achieve this, we combined our expertise in education, accessible technology, user interfaces and geometric modelling. We built a generic accessible graphical user interface (GUI) and a suitable geometric modelling system and used these to produce two prototype modelling exercises. These tools were deployed in a school for students with complex disabilities and are now being used for a variety of educational and developmental purposes. In this paper, we present the project's motivations, approach and implementation details together with initial results, including 3D printed objects designed by young people who have disabilties.
Source based heterogeneous modelling is a powerful way of defining gradient materials within a volume. The current solutions do not take into account the topology of the object and can provide counter intuitive results for complex objects. This paper presents a method to interpolate material properties and attributes based on the accessibility of the points in respect to the material features defined by the user. Our method requires the non overlapping source features with constant material to interpolate gradient materials, by using Voronoi diagrams on interior distances. It leads to intuitive material properties across the shape regardless of its topology or complexity. We show how the shape conformal field is defined inside the volume and can be extended outside the volume to create a valid operator for a heterogeneous modelling system dealing with scalar fields. The presented method is computationally e cient and has several applications, such as material property interpolation and shape aware procedural micro structures.Keywords: Heterogeneous modelling, material interpolation, shape conformal, interior distance, procedural texturing
The paper presents a novel technique based on extension of a general mathematical method of transfinite interpolation to solve an actual problem in the context of a heterogeneous volume modelling area. It deals with time-dependent changes to the volumetric material properties (material density, colour, and others) as a transformation of the volumetric material distributions in space-time accompanying geometric shape transformations such as metamorphosis. The main idea is to represent the geometry of both objects by scalar fields with distance properties, to establish in a higher-dimensional space a time gap during which the geometric transformation takes place, and to use these scalar fields to apply the new space-time transfinite interpolation to volumetric material attributes within this time gap. The proposed solution is analytical in its nature, does not require heavy numerical computations and can be used in real-time applications. Applications of this technique also include texturing and displacement mapping of time-variant surfaces, and parametric design of volumetric microstructures.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.