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@InProceedings{RamosSantCava:2019:PaApIn,
               author = "Ramos, Alexandre Ribeiro Cajazeira and Santos, Emanuele and 
                         Cavalcante Neto, Joaquim Bento",
          affiliation = "{Federal University of Ceara} and {Federal University of Ceara} 
                         and {Federal University of Ceara}",
                title = "A partition approach to interpolate polygon sets for animation",
            booktitle = "Proceedings...",
                 year = "2019",
               editor = "Oliveira, Luciano Rebou{\c{c}}as de and Sarder, Pinaki and Lage, 
                         Marcos and Sadlo, Filip",
         organization = "Conference on Graphics, Patterns and Images, 32. (SIBGRAPI)",
            publisher = "IEEE Computer Society",
              address = "Los Alamitos",
             keywords = "Visualization of spatiotemporal phenomena, Animation, 
                         Interpolation.",
             abstract = "The use of animation can be a good alternative to static 
                         visualizations when communicating dynamic changes. Some approaches 
                         already represent spatiotemporal phenomena using a polygon set for 
                         each time instant. However, these representations are static and 
                         not general enough to be applied for the interpolation of 
                         arbitrary polygons. Furthermore, the problem of interpolating 
                         arbitrary polygons present a set of requirements that are not 
                         satisfied by the currently available tools. For example, the 
                         polygons are arbitrary, and the interpolation should be smooth and 
                         fully automatic (not requiring user intervention). To solve this 
                         problem, we present an approach to interpolate arbitrary polygon 
                         sets that satisfy those requirements, and that can be used to 
                         visualize temporal changes of different phenomena as an animation. 
                         In the proposed approach, we appropriately divide and identify 
                         correspondences between origin and target polygon sets. Our 
                         approach is general enough so that different polygon division 
                         techniques can be used. We also performed a series of experiments 
                         comparing a few different techniques and discuss the results.",
  conference-location = "Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil",
      conference-year = "28-31 Oct. 2019",
                  doi = "10.1109/SIBGRAPI.2019.00027",
                  url = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/SIBGRAPI.2019.00027",
             language = "en",
                  ibi = "8JMKD3MGPEW34M/3U345LB",
                  url = "http://urlib.net/ibi/8JMKD3MGPEW34M/3U345LB",
           targetfile = "23.pdf",
        urlaccessdate = "2024, Apr. 28"
}


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