From the Lab
SHED: Shape Edit Distance for Fine-grained Shape Similarity
Journal Article
Abstract
Computing similarities or distances between 3D shapes is a crucial building block for numerous tasks, including shape retrieval, exploration and classification. Current state-of-the-art distance measures mostly consider the overall appearance of the shapes and are less sensitive to fine changes in shape structure or geometry. We present shape edit distance (SHED) that measures the amount of effort needed to transform one shape into the other, in terms of rearranging the parts of one shape to match the parts of the other shape, as well as possibly adding and removing parts. The shape edit distance takes into account both the similarity of the overall shape structure and the similarity of individual parts of the shapes. We show that SHED is favorable to state-of-the-art distance measures in a variety of applications and datasets, and is especially successful in scenarios where detecting fine details of the shapes is important, such as shape retrieval and exploration.
BibTeX
@article{kleiman15shed,
author = {Yanir Kleiman and Oliver van Kaick and Olga Sorkine-Hornung and Daniel Cohen-Or},
title = {SHED: Shape Edit Distance for Fine-grained Shape Similarity},
journal = {ACM Trans. on Graphics (Proc. SIGGRAPH Asia)},
volume = {34},
number = {6},
pages = {235:1--235:11},
year = 2015,
}