GeodesicPSIM: Predicting the Quality of Static Mesh with Texture Map via Geodesic Patch Similarity
Qi Yang, Joel Jung, Xiaozhong Xu, and Shan Liu

TL;DR
This paper introduces GeodesicPSIM, a novel model-based metric that accurately predicts human perception of static mesh quality by integrating geometry and texture information through geodesic patch similarity.
Contribution
It is the first model-based metric specifically designed for static meshes with texture maps, combining geodesic patches, texture mapping, and multiple features for improved accuracy.
Findings
Outperforms existing image, point, and video-based metrics
Demonstrates robustness across different hyperparameter settings
Ablation studies confirm the effectiveness of proposed features
Abstract
Static meshes with texture maps have attracted considerable attention in both industrial manufacturing and academic research, leading to an urgent requirement for effective and robust objective quality evaluation. However, current model-based static mesh quality metrics have obvious limitations: most of them only consider geometry information, while color information is ignored, and they have strict constraints for the meshes' geometrical topology. Other metrics, such as image-based and point-based metrics, are easily influenced by the prepossessing algorithms, e.g., projection and sampling, hampering their ability to perform at their best. In this paper, we propose Geodesic Patch Similarity (GeodesicPSIM), a novel model-based metric to accurately predict human perception quality for static meshes. After selecting a group keypoints, 1-hop geodesic patches are constructed based on both…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
Topics3D Shape Modeling and Analysis · Computer Graphics and Visualization Techniques · Textile materials and evaluations
