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Title A Benchmark Dataset for Repetitive Pattern Recognitionon Textured 3D Surfaces
Authors Stefan Lengauer, Iván Sipirán, Reinhold Preiner, Tobias Schreck, Benjamin Bustos
Publication date 2021
Abstract In digital archaeology, a large research area is concerned
with
the computer-aided analysis of 3D captured ancient pottery objects. A key
aspect thereby is the analysis of motifs and patterns that were painted on
these objects' surfaces. In particular, the automatic identification and
segmentation of repetitive patterns is an important task serving different
applications such as documentation, analysis and retrieval. Such patterns
typically contain distinctive geometric features and often appear in
repetitive ornaments or friezes, thus exhibiting a significant amount of
symmetry and structure. At the same time, they can occur at varying sizes,
orientations and irregular placements, posing a particular challenge for the
detection of similarities. A key prerequisite to develop and evaluate new
detection approaches for such repetitive patterns is the availability of an
expressive dataset of 3D models, defining ground truth sets of similar
patterns occurring on their surfaces. Unfortunately, such a dataset has not
been available so far for this particular problem. We present an annotated
dataset of 82 different 3D models of painted ancient Peruvian vessels,
exhibiting different levels of repetitiveness in their surface patterns. To
serve the evaluation of detection techniques of similar patterns, our
dataset was labeled by archaeologists who identified clearly definable
pattern classes. Those given, we manually annotated their respective
occurrences on the mesh surfaces. Along with the data, we introduce an
evaluation benchmark that can rank different recognition techniques for
repetitive patterns based on the mean average precision of correctly
segmented 3D mesh faces. An evaluation of different incremental
sampling-based detection approaches, as well as a domain specific technique,
demonstrates the applicability of our benchmark. With this benchmark we
especially want to address the geometry processing community, and expect it
will induce novel approaches for pattern analysis based on geometric
reasoning like 2D shape and symmetry analysis. This can enable novel
research approaches in the Digital Humanities and related fields, based on
digitized 3D Cultural Heritage artifacts. Alongside the source code for our
evaluation scripts we provide our annotation tools for the public to extend
the benchmark and further increase its variety.
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Pages 1-8
Volume 40
Journal name Computer Graphics Forum
Publisher John Wiley & Sons (Hoboken, NJ, USA)
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Reference URL View reference page