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Automated generation of intent-based 3D Illustrations
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Source International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques archive
Proceedings of the 18th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques table of contents
Pages: 123 - 132  
Year of Publication: 1991
ISBN:0-89791-436-8
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Authors
Dorée Duncan Seligmann  Department of Computer Science, Columbia University, New York, New York
Steven Feiner  Department of Computer Science, Columbia University, New York, New York
Sponsor
SIGGRAPH: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
Bibliometrics
Downloads (6 Weeks): 15,   Downloads (12 Months): 70,   Citation Count: 40
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ABSTRACT

This paper describes an automated intent-based approach to illustration. An illustrution is a picture that is designed to fulfill a communicative intent such as showing the location of an object or showing how an object is manipulated. An illustration is generated by implementing a set of stylistic decisions, ranging from determining the way in which an individual object is lit, to deciding the general composition of the illustration. The design of an illustration is treated as a goal-driven process within a system of constraints. The goal is to achieve communicative intent; the constraints are the illustrative techniques an illustrator can apply.We have developed IBIS (Intent-Based Illustration System), a system that puts these ideas into practice. IBIS designs illustrations using a generate-and-test approach, relying upon a rule-based system of methods and evaluators. Methods are rules that specify how to accomplish visual effects, while evaluators are rules that specify how to determine how well a visual effect is accomplished in an illustration. Examples of illustrations designed by IBIS are included.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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Chakravarty, I., and Freeman, H. Characteristic Views as a Basis for Three-Dimensional Object Recognition. In Proc. Society for Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers Conf. on Robot Vision, Bellingham, WA, SPIE, vol. 336, 1982. 37-54.
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Culbert, C. CLIPS Reference Manual. NASA/Johnson Space Center, TX, 1988.
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Elhadad, M., Seligmann, D.D., Feiner, S., and McKeown, K. A Common Intention Description Language for Interactive Multi-Media Systems. IJCAI-89 Workshop on Intelligent Interfaces, Detroit, MI, August 22, 1989, 46-52.
 
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Feiner, S. and McKeown, K. Coordinating text and graphics in explanation generation. In Proc. AAAI-90, Boston, MA, July 29-August 3,199O. 442-449.
 
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Feiner, S. and Seligmann, D.D. Dynamic 3D Illustrations with Visibility Constraints. In Proc. Computer Graphics International 91, Cambridge, MA, June 24-28, 1991.
 
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Martin, J. High Tech Illustration. Cincinnati, OH, North Light Books, 1989.
 
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Neiman, D. Graphical Animation from Knowledge. In Proc. AAAI '82, Pittsburgh, PA, August 18-20, 1982, 373-376.
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Seligmann, D. D. Intent-Based Illustration: A Visual Language for 3D Worlds. Thesis Proposal. Department of Computer Science, Columbia University. New York, January 1991.
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Strothotte, T. Pictures in Advice-Giving Dialog Systems: From Knowledge Representation to the User Interface. In Proc. Graphics Interface '89, London Ontario, June 19-23, 1989, 94-99.
 
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Thomas, T.A. Technical Illustration, 2nd. Edition. McGraw-Hill, New York, NY. 1968.

CITED BY  40
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Collaborative Colleagues:
Dorée Duncan Seligmann: colleagues
Steven Feiner: colleagues

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