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Nassim Jibai is at the end of his thrid year of his PhD in Computer
Science at UJF and working
at INRIA Rhone-Alpes at Grenoble, France. He is supervised
by
Prof. Nicolas Holzschuch and co-advised
by Dr. Cyril
Soler . He is financed by Region Rhone-Alpes through the LIMA
project.
On a personal level, Nassim is a sport fanatic and all
sorts of out-doors activities. He is involve in all sorts of
entertainment activities; theater, dancing, music, etc...
Nassim's current research interests are filtering 3D tomographic
data, distributed system, and parallel computation.
News
Nassim is finishing his Thesis on filtering 3D tomography data.
Currently, he is writing his thesis. He is also looking and
candidating for positions in either the research field or
industry.
He is interested in solving problems that involves
distributed systems and parallelism.
Kindly, find my C.V here.
Research themes
Using anisotropic diffusion we smooth 3D tomographic data at a
user-defined scale while preserving the sharp features of the
model.
All the computation is done on the GPU using CUDA as the
subject fits the characteristics of embarrassingly parallel
problems.
Here is an abstract of the research:
Three-dimensional volumes produced using tomographic reconstruction
are inherently contaminated by noise that is introduced by the
reconstruction algorithms.
When iso-contour surfaces are
extracted from these volumes, the noise manifests as intricate
geometric and topological artifacts in the surfaces.
We present a
method to smooth the 3D tomographic data, before surface extraction,
while preserving features at a specified scale.
Our algorithm is
controlled using a single user parameter — the minimum scale of
features to be preserved. Any variation that is smaller than the
specified scale
is treated as noise and smoothed, while
discontinuities such as corners, edges and detail at a larger scale
are preserved. We demonstrate that our smoothed data
produces clean
contour surfaces using standard surface-extraction algorithms. Our
method is inspired by anisotropic diffusion within the volume. We
compute our
diffusion tensors from the local continuous histograms of
gradients around each voxel, thus extending previous approaches that
use ad-hoc diffusion tensors.
Since our smoothing method works
entirely on the GPU, it is extremely fast.
(a) (b) (c)
(d) (e) (f)
Slices of (a) the original CT reconstruction of the inhaler model, (b) close-up view of an area of (a)
squared in red and (c) the extracted surface of (a). (d) CT slice of the inhaler model after smoothing
by our method, (e) close-up view of the smooth CT (d) square in red, and (f) extracted surface from
smoothed data. We raised the gamma level in the CT images to better visualize the details of the volumes.
Continuous local gradient histogram with their respective diffusion tensors at distinct locations. The top figures show
a histogram computed over a continuous region resulting with one dominant direction. Its respective diffusion tensor
is flat and orthogonal to the dominant direction. The bottom figures show a histogram computed over a region
containing an edge resulting with two dominant directions. Its respective diffusion tensor results in a cylinder shape
orthogonal to the dominant directions and parallel to the edge.
(a ) (b)
Mechanical part (300^3 voxels): (a) surface extracted from original data and (b) surface extracted after smoothing by
our algorithm. Note how our algorithm removes the surface noise while preserving the sharp features such as the internal
threads or the letters on top of the model.
Recent publications
2012
Thèse
- titre
- Lissage multi-echelle sur GPU des images et volumes avec preservation des details
- auteur
- Nassim Jibai
- article
- Mathématiques générales [math.GM]. Université de Grenoble, 2012. Français. ⟨NNT : 2012GRENM025⟩
- identifiant
- tel-00748064
- typdoc
- Thèse
- Accès au texte intégral et bibtex
2011
Communication dans un congrès
- titre
- Multiscale Feature-Preserving Smoothing of Tomographic Data
- auteur
- Nassim Jibai, Cyril Soler, Kartic Subr, Nicolas Holzschuch
- article
- ACM SIGGRAPH 2011 Posters, ACM, Aug 2011, Vancouver, Canada. pp.Article No. 63, ⟨10.1145/2037715.2037786⟩
- identifiant
- inria-00611915
- typdoc
- Communication dans un congrès
- DOI
- DOI : 10.1145/2037715.2037786
- audience
- Audience internationale
- Accès au texte intégral et bibtex
» See the complete list of my publications
» Image gallery
Curriculum Vitae
Short Bio
2009-2012 PhD in Computer Graphics, Grenoble Universities, INRIA Rhône-Alpes - Grenoble, France.
2003-2006 Master's Degree in Computer Science, A library for implementing and using sequential and distributed recursive subdivision surfaces, AUB, Beirut, Lebanon. Find my Thesis Here in PDF.
This work was published in the Proceeding of Computer-Aided Design & Application 2006 entitled A Topological Abstraction for Implementing Recursive Surface Computations .
2000-2002 B.Sc in Computer Science; American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon.
Teaching
Instructor for Introduction to Programming: fall 2003-2004 and fall 2007-2008.
At AUB; American University of Beirut, Lebanon
Personal area
Here is what I like. Some links.
Some links... |
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