- Journal Home
- Volume 42 - 2024
- Volume 41 - 2023
- Volume 40 - 2022
- Volume 39 - 2021
- Volume 38 - 2020
- Volume 37 - 2019
- Volume 36 - 2018
- Volume 35 - 2017
- Volume 34 - 2016
- Volume 33 - 2015
- Volume 32 - 2014
- Volume 31 - 2013
- Volume 30 - 2012
- Volume 29 - 2011
- Volume 28 - 2010
- Volume 27 - 2009
- Volume 26 - 2008
- Volume 25 - 2007
- Volume 24 - 2006
- Volume 23 - 2005
- Volume 22 - 2004
- Volume 21 - 2003
- Volume 20 - 2002
- Volume 19 - 2001
- Volume 18 - 2000
- Volume 17 - 1999
- Volume 16 - 1998
- Volume 15 - 1997
- Volume 14 - 1996
- Volume 13 - 1995
- Volume 12 - 1994
- Volume 11 - 1993
- Volume 10 - 1992
- Volume 9 - 1991
- Volume 8 - 1990
- Volume 7 - 1989
- Volume 6 - 1988
- Volume 5 - 1987
- Volume 4 - 1986
- Volume 3 - 1985
- Volume 2 - 1984
- Volume 1 - 1983
Cited by
- BibTex
- RIS
- TXT
As a corner-cutting subdivision scheme, Lane-Riesefeld algorithm possesses the concise and unified form for generating uniform B-spline curves: vertex splitting plus repeated midpoint averaging. In this paper, we modify the second midpoint averaging step of the Lane-Riesefeld algorithm by introducing a parameter which controls the size of corner cutting, and generalize the strategy to arbitrary topological surfaces of general degree. By adjusting the free parameter, the proposed method can generate subdivision surfaces with flexible shapes. Experimental results demonstrate that our algorithm can produce subdivision surfaces with comparable or even better quality than the other state-of-the-art approaches by carefully choosing the free parameters.
}, issn = {1991-7139}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.4208/jcm.1905-m2018-0274}, url = {http://global-sci.org/intro/article_detail/jcm/16667.html} }As a corner-cutting subdivision scheme, Lane-Riesefeld algorithm possesses the concise and unified form for generating uniform B-spline curves: vertex splitting plus repeated midpoint averaging. In this paper, we modify the second midpoint averaging step of the Lane-Riesefeld algorithm by introducing a parameter which controls the size of corner cutting, and generalize the strategy to arbitrary topological surfaces of general degree. By adjusting the free parameter, the proposed method can generate subdivision surfaces with flexible shapes. Experimental results demonstrate that our algorithm can produce subdivision surfaces with comparable or even better quality than the other state-of-the-art approaches by carefully choosing the free parameters.