Importance of shadow effects
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As discussed in the introduction, shadows play an important
role in our understanding of 3D geometry:
- Shadows help to understand relative object position
and size in a scene49, 38, 27, 30, 31. For example, without a
cast shadow, we are not able to determine the position of
an object in space (see Figure 1).
This point is explained in the following Animation: it shows how shadows can remove ambiguity about trajectory of a sliding object, which can be the same in 2D but corresponding to two different paths in 3D.
- Shadows can also help us understanding the geometry
of a complex receiver38 (see Figure 2a, 2b and Animation).
- Finally, shadows provide useful visual cues that help in
understanding the geometry of a complex occluder38: shadows can reveal occluded geometry (as the teapot held by the robot, see Figure 3), or even geometry that is out of the field of view, as a plane passing above the robot (see Animation).