2016-11-182007-100954-4828http://hdl.handle.net/10784/9689Surface reconstruction from noisy point samples must take into consideration the stochastic nature of the sample -- In other words, geometric algorithms reconstructing the surface or curve should not insist in following in a literal way each sampled point -- Instead, they must interpret the sample as a “point cloud” and try to build the surface as passing through the best possible (in the statistical sense) geometric locus that represents the sample -- This work presents two new methods to find a Piecewise Linear approximation from a Nyquist-compliant stochastic sampling of a quasi-planar C1 curve C(u) : R → R3, whose velocity vector never vanishes -- One of the methods articulates in an entirely new way Principal Component Analysis (statistical) and Voronoi-Delaunay (deterministic) approaches -- It uses these two methods to calculate the best possible tape-shaped polygon covering the planarised point set, and then approximates the manifold by the medial axis of such a polygon -- The other method applies Principal Component Analysis to find a direct Piecewise Linear approximation of C(u) -- A complexity comparison of these two methods is presented along with a qualitative comparison with previously developed ones -- It turns out that the method solely based on Principal Component Analysis is simpler and more robust for non self-intersecting curves -- For self-intersecting curves the Voronoi-Delaunay based Medial Axis approach is more robust, at the price of higher computational complexity -- An application is presented in Integration of meshes originated in range images of an art piece -- Such an application reaches the point of complete reconstruction of a unified meshapplication/pdfenginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessPrincipal component and Voronoi skeleton alternatives for curve reconstruction from noisy point setsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleGRÁFICOS POR COMPUTADORTOPOLOGÍATopologyComputer graphicsTopologyComputer graphicsTriangulación de DelaunayIngeniería inversaDiagramas de VoronoiReconstrucción superficialReconstrucción 3DAcceso abierto2016-11-18Ruíz, ÓscarVanegas, CarlosCadavid, Carlos10.1080/09544820701403771