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10th Pacific Conference on Computer Graphics and Applications (PG'02)
Blending Multiple Views
Tsinghua University, Beijing
October 09-October 11
ISBN: 0-7695-1784-6
Ramesh Raskar, Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs
Kok-Lim Low, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Current blending methods in image-based rendering use local information such as "deviations from the closest views" to find blending weights. They include approaches such as view-dependent texture mapping and blending fields used in unstructured lumigraph rendering. However, in the presence of depth discontinuities, these techniques do not provide smooth transitions in the target image if the intensities of corresponding pixels in the source images are significantly different (e.g. due to specular highlights).

In this paper, we present an image blending technique that allows the use of global visibility and occlusion constraints. Each blending weight now has a global component and a local component, which, respectively, are due to the view-independent and the view-dependent contributions of the source images. Being view-independent, the global components can be computed in a pre-processing stage. Traditional graphics hardware is exploited to accelerate the computation of the global blending weights.

Index Terms:
Image-Based Rendering, Image Blending
Citation:
Ramesh Raskar, Kok-Lim Low, "Blending Multiple Views," pg, pp.145, 10th Pacific Conference on Computer Graphics and Applications (PG'02), 2002
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