Jan Philipp Bullenkamp, Theresa Kaiser, F. Linsel, S. Krömker, Hubert Mara
{"title":"Discrete Morse theory segmentation on high-resolution 3D lithic artifacts","authors":"Jan Philipp Bullenkamp, Theresa Kaiser, F. Linsel, S. Krömker, Hubert Mara","doi":"10.1515/itit-2023-0027","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract Motivated by the question of understanding the roots of tool making by anatomically modern humans and coexisting Neanderthals in the Paleolithic, a number of shape classification methods have been tested on photographs and drawings of stone tools. Since drawings contain interpretation and photographs fool both human and computational methods by color and shadows on the surface, we propose an approach using 3D datasets as best means for analyzing shape, and rely on first open access repositories on lithic tools. The goal is to not only analyze shape on an artifact level, but allow a more detailed analysis of stone tools on a scar and ridge level. A Morse-Smale complex (MS complex) extracted from the triangular mesh of a 3D model is a reduced skeleton consisting of linked lines on the mesh. Discrete Morse theory makes it possible to obtain such a MS complex from a scalar function. Thus, we begin with Multi-Scale Integral Invariant filtering on the meshes of lithic artifacts, which provides curvature measures for ridges, which are convex, and scars, which are concave. The resulting values on the vertices can be used as our discrete Morse function and the skeleton we get is build up from lines that will coincide with the ridges and, implicitly, contains the scars as enclosed regions of those lines on the mesh. As this requires a few parameters, we provide a graphical user interface (GUI) to allow altering the predefined parameters to quickly find a good result. In addition, a stone tool may have areas that do not belong to the scar/ridge class. These can be masked and we use conforming MS complexes to ensure that the skeleton keeps these areas whole. Finally, results are shown on real and open access datasets. The source code and manually annotated ground truth for the evaluation are provided as Open Access with a Creative Commons license.","PeriodicalId":512610,"journal":{"name":"it - Information Technology","volume":"99 12","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-06-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"it - Information Technology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1515/itit-2023-0027","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract Motivated by the question of understanding the roots of tool making by anatomically modern humans and coexisting Neanderthals in the Paleolithic, a number of shape classification methods have been tested on photographs and drawings of stone tools. Since drawings contain interpretation and photographs fool both human and computational methods by color and shadows on the surface, we propose an approach using 3D datasets as best means for analyzing shape, and rely on first open access repositories on lithic tools. The goal is to not only analyze shape on an artifact level, but allow a more detailed analysis of stone tools on a scar and ridge level. A Morse-Smale complex (MS complex) extracted from the triangular mesh of a 3D model is a reduced skeleton consisting of linked lines on the mesh. Discrete Morse theory makes it possible to obtain such a MS complex from a scalar function. Thus, we begin with Multi-Scale Integral Invariant filtering on the meshes of lithic artifacts, which provides curvature measures for ridges, which are convex, and scars, which are concave. The resulting values on the vertices can be used as our discrete Morse function and the skeleton we get is build up from lines that will coincide with the ridges and, implicitly, contains the scars as enclosed regions of those lines on the mesh. As this requires a few parameters, we provide a graphical user interface (GUI) to allow altering the predefined parameters to quickly find a good result. In addition, a stone tool may have areas that do not belong to the scar/ridge class. These can be masked and we use conforming MS complexes to ensure that the skeleton keeps these areas whole. Finally, results are shown on real and open access datasets. The source code and manually annotated ground truth for the evaluation are provided as Open Access with a Creative Commons license.
摘要 为了了解旧石器时代解剖学上的现代人和共存的尼安德特人制造工具的根源,我们在石器的照片和图纸上测试了许多形状分类方法。由于图纸包含解释,而照片则通过表面的颜色和阴影来愚弄人类和计算方法,因此我们建议使用三维数据集作为分析形状的最佳方法,并依靠首个开放存取的石器资料库。这样做的目的不仅是在器物层面分析形状,还能在痕和脊层面对石器进行更详细的分析。从三维模型的三角形网格中提取的莫尔斯-斯马尔复合体(MS复合体)是由网格上的链接线组成的缩小骨架。离散莫尔斯理论使得从标量函数中获得 MS 复合物成为可能。因此,我们首先对石制品的网格进行多尺度积分不变量过滤,为凸起的脊和凹陷的疤提供曲率测量。顶点上的结果值可用作我们的离散莫尔斯函数,我们得到的骨架是由与山脊重合的线条构成的,并且隐含地包含了作为这些线条在网格上的封闭区域的疤痕。由于这只需要几个参数,我们提供了一个图形用户界面(GUI),允许更改预定义参数,以快速找到一个好的结果。此外,石材工具可能会有不属于疤痕/棱线类的区域。我们可以屏蔽这些区域,并使用符合要求的 MS 复合物来确保骨架保持这些区域的完整性。最后,我们展示了真实数据集和开放数据集的结果。用于评估的源代码和人工标注的地面实况以知识共享许可协议(Creative Commons license)开放获取的形式提供。