Paul A. Karger
SOUPS 2006
Prioritized-Layered Projection (PLP) is a technique for fast rendering of high depth complexity scenes. It works by estimating the visible polygons of a scene from a given viewpoint incrementally one primitive at a time. It is not a conservative technique instead PLP is suitable for the computation of partially correct images for use as part of time-critical rendering systems. From a very high level PLP amounts to a modification of a simple view-frustum culling algorithm however it requires the computation of a special occupancy-based tessellation and the assignment to each cell of the tessellation a solidityva\ue which is used to compute a special ordering on how primitives get projected. In this paper we detail the PLP algorithm its main components and implementation. We also provide experimental evidence of its performance including results on two types of spatial tessellation (using octree- and Delaunay-based tessellations) and several datasets. We also discuss several extensions of our technique. © 2000 IEEE.
Paul A. Karger
SOUPS 2006
Eugene H. Ratzlaff
ICDAR 2001
C. Neti, Salim Roukos
ASRU 1997
David B. Mayer, Ashford W. Stalnaker
ACM SIGMIS CPR 1967