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Downsampled depth encoding for enhanced 3D range geometry compression

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Abstract

The use of three-dimensional (3D) range geometry is expanding across a variety of disciplines ranging from medicine to the visual arts. A large amount of information is available in 3D range geometry, causing some applications to be limited in their ability to effectively store or transmit captured data. To help alleviate this constraint, a variety of 3D range data compression techniques have been proposed. One method, multiwavelength depth (MWD) encoding, smoothly encodes 3D range geometry into the three color channels of a 2D RGB image. To the best of our knowledge, we present a novel compression enhancement to further reduce file sizes that employs image downsampling, MWD encoding, and lossless (e.g.,  PNG) or lossy (e.g.,  JPEG) compression. Image upsampling is used to return downsampled encodings to their original resolution from which the 3D information is then decoded. The proposed method is robust to various scales of downsampling and levels of lossy compression. For example, when this method was applied with 50% downsampling and JPEG 85 to an encoding of a 3D face scan, a compression ratio of 68.85:1 versus the raw data was achieved with a global RMS reconstruction accuracy of 98.77%. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method can provide substantial file size savings at minimal reduction in overall reconstruction accuracy.

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Data Availability

Data underlying the illustration and results presented in this paper are available from Ref. [15] for Figs. 1, 4, and 6 and Ref. [17] for Fig. 7.

15. Smithsonian Institution, “Abraham Lincoln,” 2021, Accessed and modified under Creative Commons (CC0) from https://3d.si.edu/explorer/abraham-lincoln-volk-life-mask.

17. NASA/JPL/University of Arizona, “Digital terrain map: well-preserved impact crater with steep slopes,” https://www.uahirise.org/dtm/dtm.php?ID=ESP_032975_1415.

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