Occlusion presents a major challenge in visualizing three-dimensional flow fields with streamlines. Displaying too many streamlines at once makes it difficult to locate interesting regions, but displaying too few streamlines risks missing important features. A more ideal streamline exploration model is to allow the viewer to freely move across the field that has been populated with interesting streamlines and pull away the streamlines that cause occlusion so that the viewer can inspect the hidden ones in detail. In this paper, we present a streamline deformation algorithm that supports such user-driven interaction with three-dimensional flow fields. We define a view-dependent focus+context technique that moves the streamlines occluding the focus area using a novel displacement model. To preserve the context surrounding the user-chosen focus area, we propose two shape models to define the transition zone for the surrounding streamlines, and the displacement of the contextual streamlines is solved interactively with a goal of preserving their shapes as much as possible. Based on our deformation model, we design an interactive streamline exploration tool using a lens metaphor. Our system runs interactively so that users can move their focus and examine the flow field freely.
Revised: August 19, 2015 |
Published: January 12, 2015
Citation
Tong X., C. Chen, H. Shen, and P.C. Wong. 2015.Interactive Streamline Exploration and Manipulation Using Deformation. In IEEE Pacific Visualization Symposium (PacificVis 2015), April 14-17, 2015, Hangzhou, China, edited by S Liu, G Scheuermann and S Takahashi, 1-8. Piscataway, New Jersey:IEEE.PNNL-SA-101949.doi:10.1109/PACIFICVIS.2015.7156349