Abstract
A geometric framework for finding intrinsic correspondence between animated 3D faces is presented. We model facial expressions as isometries of the facial surface and find the correspondence between two faces as the minimum-distortion mapping. Generalized multidimensional scaling is used for this goal. We apply our approach to texture mapping onto 3D video, expression exaggeration and morphing between faces.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
References
Lee, Y., Terzopoulos, D., Waters, K.: Realistic modeling for facial animation. In: Proc. SIGGRAPH, vol. 16, pp. 55–62 (1995)
Vetter, T., Blanz, V.: A morphable model for the synthesis of 3D faces. In: Proc. SIGGRAPH (1999)
Pighin, F., Szeliski, R., Salesin, D.H.: Modeling and animating realistic faces from images. IJCV 50(2), 143–169 (2002)
Blanz, V., Basso, C., Poggio, T., Vetter, T.: Reanimating faces in images and video. Computer Graphics Forum 22(3), 641–650 (2003)
Brennan, S.E.: The caricature generator. Leonardo 18, 170–178 (1985)
Zigelman, G., Kimmel, R., Kiryati, N.: Texture mapping using surface flattening via multi-dimensional scaling. IEEE Trans. Visualization and computer graphics 9(2), 198–207 (2002)
Zhou, K., Snyder, J., Guo, B., Shum, H.-Y.: Iso-charts: Stretch-driven mesh parameterization using spectral analysis. In: Proc. ACM SGP, pp. 45–54 (2004)
Alexa, M.: Merging polyhedral shapes with scattered features. The Visual Computer 16, 26–37 (2000)
Kraevoy, V., Sheffer, A., Gotsman, C.: Matchmaker: Constructing constrained texture maps. In: Proc. SIGGRAPH (2003)
Huang, P.S., Zhang, C.P., Chiang, F.P.: High speed 3-D shape measurement based on digital fringe projection. Optical Engineering 42(1), 163–168 (2003)
Edwards, G.J., Cootes, T.F., Taylor, C.J.: Face recognition using active appearance models. In: Burkhardt, H., Neumann, B. (eds.) ECCV 1998. LNCS, vol. 1407, pp. 581–595. Springer, Heidelberg (1998)
Bronstein, A.M., Bronstein, M.M., Kimmel, R.: Three-dimensional face recognition. IJCV 64(1), 5–30 (2005)
Borg, I., Groenen, P.: Modern multidimensional scaling - theory and applications. Springer, Heidelberg (1997)
Bronstein, A.M., Bronstein, M.M., Kimmel, R.: Generalized multidimensional scaling: a framework for isometry-invariant partial surface matching. Proc. National Academy of Sciences 103(5), 1168–1172 (2006)
Kimmel, R., Sethian, J.A.: Computing geodesic on manifolds. Proc. National Academy of Science 95, 8431–8435 (1998)
Bronstein, A.M., Bronstein, M.M., Kimmel, R.: Efficient computation of isometry-invariant distances between surfaces. Technical Report CIS-2006-02, Dept. of Computer Science, Technion, Israel (2005)
Floater, M.S., Hormann, K.: Surface Parameterization: a Tutorial and Survey. In: Advances on Multiresolution in Geometric Modelling. Springer, Heidelberg (to appear, 2004)
Bertsekas, D.: Nonlinear programming, 2nd edn. Atlanta Scientific (1999)
Bronstein, A.M., Bronstein, M.M., Kimmel, R.: Expression-invariant representations for human faces. Technical Report CIS-2005-01, Dept. of Computer Science, Technion, Israel (2005)
Chang, K., Bowyer, K.W., Flynn, P.J.: Face recognition using 2D and 3D facial data. In: ACM Workshop on Multimodal User Authentication, pp. 25–32 (2003)
Bronstein, M.M., Bronstein, A.M., Kimmel, R., Yavneh, I.: Multigrid multidimensional scaling. Numerical Linear Algebra with Applications (NLAA) 13, 149–171 (2006)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2006 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Bronstein, A.M., Bronstein, M.M., Kimmel, R. (2006). Facetoface: An Isometric Model for Facial Animation. In: Perales, F.J., Fisher, R.B. (eds) Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects. AMDO 2006. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 4069. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/11789239_5
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/11789239_5
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-36031-5
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-36032-2
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)