A Survey of Compressed GPU-Based Direct Volume Rendering

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Identifiers

Publication date

Authors

Balsa Rodríguez, Marcos
Gobbetti, Enrico
Makhinya, Maxim
Marton, Fabio
Pajarola, Renato
Suter, Susanne K.

Advisors

Other responsabilities

Journal Title

Bibliographic citation

Rodríguez, M. B., Gobbetti, E., Guitián, J. A. I., Makhinya, M., Marton, F., Pajarola, R., & Suter, S. K. (2013, May). A Survey of Compressed GPU-Based Direct Volume Rendering. In Eurographics (State of the Art Reports) (pp. 117-136). https://doi.org/10.2312/conf/EG2013/stars/117-136

Type of academic work

Academic degree

Abstract

[Abstract]: Great advancements in commodity graphics hardware have favored GPU-based volume rendering as the main adopted solution for interactive exploration of rectilinear scalar volumes on commodity platforms. Nevertheless, long data transfer times and GPU memory size limitations are often the main limiting factors, especially for massive, time-varying or multi-volume visualization, or for networked visualization on the emerging mobile devices. To address this issue, a variety of level-of-detail data representations and compression techniques have been introduced. In order to improve capabilities and performance over the entire storage, distribution and rendering pipeline, the encoding/decoding process is typically highly asymmetric, and systems should ideally compress at data production time and decompress on demand at rendering time. Compression and level-of-detail pre-computation does not have to adhere to real-time constraints and can be performed off-line for high quality results. In contrast, adaptive real-time rendering from compressed representations requires fast, transient, and spatially independent decompression. In this report, we review the existing compressed GPU volume rendering approaches, covering compact representation models, compression techniques, GPU rendering architectures and fast decoding techniques.

Description

Presented at EG2013 STARs - Eurographics State-of-the-art Report - Girona, Spain, 2013.

Rights

© The Eurographics Association 2013.
This work is partially supported by the People Programme (Marie Curie Actions) of the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013/ under REA grant agreements nº290227 (DIVA) and nº251415 (GOLEM).