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Revision as of 02:11, 11 February 2024

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Spline subdivision schemes for convex compact sets
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    Spline subdivision schemes for convex compact sets (English)
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    23 October 2001
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    Subdivision schemes are recursive methods for the generation of smooth functions from discrete data. By these methods at each recursion step, new discrete values on a finer grid are computed by weighted sums of the already existing discrete values. In the limit of this recursive process, set-valued functions are generated, which can be expressed explicitly in terms of linear combinations of integer shifts of B-splines with the initial data as coefficients. The subdivision techniques are used to show that these limit set-valued spline functions have shape-preserving properties similar to those of the usual spline functions. The mathematical tools used for analyzing set-valued functions include the support function technique for describing convex compact sets and methods of embedding the cone of convex compact subsets of \(\mathbb{R}^n\) in a linear normed space, with an addition defined as the Minkowsky sum of sets. The extension of subdivision methods from the scalar setting to the set-valued case is applied in the approximate reconstruction of 3-D bodies from finite collections of their parallel cross-sections.
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    set-valued functions
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    spline subdivision
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    shape preservation
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    B-splines
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    convex compact sets
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    Minkowsky sum of sets
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    reconstruction of 3-D bodies
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