4.8 Article

Numerical Inversion of SRNF Maps for Elastic Shape Analysis of Genus-Zero Surfaces

Journal

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TPAMI.2016.2647596

Keywords

Elastic shape analysis; square-root representations; Riemannian metrics; elastic registration; shape statistics; shape modeling

Funding

  1. Durham University IAS Senior Research Fellowship (EU) [FP7-609412]
  2. DU Department of Mathematical Sciences
  3. Division Of Mathematical Sciences
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1621787] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Recent developments in elastic shape analysis (ESA) aremotivated by the fact that it provides a comprehensive framework for simultaneous registration, deformation, and comparison of shapes. These methods achieve computational efficiency using certain square-root representations that transform invariant elastic metrics into euclidean metrics, allowing for the application of standard algorithms and statistical tools. For analyzing shapes of embeddings of S-2 in R-3, Jermyn et al. [1] introduced square-root normal fields (SRNFs), which transform an elastic metric, with desirable invariant properties, into the L-2 metric. These SRNFs are essentially surface normals scaled by square-roots of infinitesimal area elements. A critical need in shape analysis is a method for inverting solutions (deformations, averages, modes of variations, etc.) computed in SRNF space, back to the original surface space for visualizations and inferences. Due to the lack of theory for understanding SRNF maps and their inverses, we take a numerical approach, and derive an efficient multiresolution algorithm, based on solving an optimization problem in the surface space, that estimates surfaces corresponding to given SRNFs. This solution is found to be effective even for complex shapes that undergo significant deformations including bending and stretching, e.g., human bodies and animals. We use this inversion for computing elastic shape deformations, transferring deformations, summarizing shapes, and for finding modes of variability in a given collection, while simultaneously registering the surfaces. We demonstrate the proposed algorithms using a statistical analysis of human body shapes, classification of generic surfaces, and analysis of brain structures.

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