Abstract
We propose a novel type of decomposition for polygonal shapes. It is thought that, for the task of object recognition, the human visual system uses a part-based representation. Decompositions based on skeletons have been previously proposed in computer vision. Our method is the first one, however, based on the straight line skeleton. Compared to the medial axis, the straight line skeleton has a few advantages: it contains only straight segments and has a lower combinatorial complexity. The skeletal nodes and the way they are generated are the basis for our decomposition, which has two stages that result in a hierarchical decomposition into overlapping parts. First, a number of visually striking parts are identified, then their boundaries are successively simplified, by locally removing detail. Our method runs in time O((n + r 2 2) log2 n), after the skeleton construction, where r 2 is the number of reflex edge annihilations. The decomposition is invariant to rigid motions and uniform scalings. We present results indicating that it provides natural decompositions for a variety of shapes. This makes it attractive for shape based matching in content-based image retrieval, for example.
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TĂnase, M., Veltkamp, R.C. (2003). Polygon Decomposition Based on the Straight Line Skeleton. In: Asano, T., Klette, R., Ronse, C. (eds) Geometry, Morphology, and Computational Imaging. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 2616. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-36586-9_16
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-36586-9_16
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