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“Porosity”in 3D digital images of heterogeneous materials: a homological approach

“Porosity”in 3D digital images of heterogeneous materials: a homological approach. SADIEL, November 2008 Seville. Pedro Real real@us.es Computational Topology and Applied Math Team E.T.S. Ingeniería Informática UNIVERSITY OF SEVILLE (Spain).

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“Porosity”in 3D digital images of heterogeneous materials: a homological approach

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  1. “Porosity”in 3D digital images of heterogeneous materials: a homological approach SADIEL, November 2008 Seville Pedro Real real@us.es Computational Topology and Applied Math Team E.T.S. Ingeniería Informática UNIVERSITY OF SEVILLE (Spain)

  2. Emergent project of topological quantification of nD digital objects (Computational Algebraic Topology) • Project R+D+I del MEC MTM2006-03722 “A New Model of algebraic-topological representation of digital volumes: the AT-model”. • Project R+D+I of Excelence of Junta Andalucia P06-TIC-02268 “Topological Analysis of nD digital images”. • Andalusian Reseach Group investigación FQM-296 “Computational Topology and Applied Mathematics”.

  3. Facing to the problem of “porosity” in heterogeneous digital volumes For us POROSITY means more or less, quantification of an accurate GEOMETRICAL DESCRIPTION of the TOPOLOGICAL COMPLEXITY of the object (and perhaps of its complement)

  4. Estructura ósea trabecular Trabecular bone architecture: quantification of its topological complexity

  5. Pedro Real Topología Algebraica Computacional e Imágenes Médicas Cracks in the architecture without apparent loss of material

  6. Digital Volume A voxel is a unit of graphic information defining a point in three-dimensional space. Voxels are structured in a digital volume in a regular cubic grid

  7. Digital volumes • We consider 3D binary images, i.e., volume images consisting of object and background. • Each voxel has 26 neighbours in its immediate neighbourhood: six face neighbours,twelve edge neighbours, and eight vertex neighbours. Object voxels having at least one face neighbour in the background are called border voxels. We use 26-connectedness for the object and 6-connectedness for the background,

  8. Method of Saha et al, 2003: topological classification of voxels of the thinned volume

  9. DESCOMPOSITION IN CILINDERS Y RODs STAUBER & Müller, 2006 METHOD: ELEMENTAL CHARACTERIZATION OF TRABECULAR BONE MICRO_CT VOLUME “TOPOLOGICAL” SQUELETONIZATION SEGMENTOS (VOXELES) DILATION DESCOMPOSITION IN CILINDERS AND RODS VOLUMETRIC AND SUBVOLUMETRIC STUDY

  10. AT-model Cellular version of the volume Image of a porous binary volumetric object consisting of 25000 voxels microMR bone volume

  11. Objective: homological analysis • Image ↔ Algebra -ALGEBRAIC-TOPOLOGICAL MODEL (Gonzalez-Diaz and Real, Discrete Applied Math., 2003) -CHAIN HOMOTOPIES FOR OBJECT TOPOLOGICAL REPRESENTATION (Gonzalez-Díaz, Jimenez, Medrano and Real, Discrete Applied Mathematics, 2008)

  12. Global Topological Quantification of VOIs of porous media • DIGITAL VOLUME (41642 voxels)

  13. AT-model

  14. 4) Visualization: 10 connected components, 4332 “tunels” and 27 cavities

  15. Process of topological computation in real cases Sequences of 2D binary images obtained by uMR (ETH Zurich) Cellularization of three slices

  16. Facing to the problem of “porosity” in heterogeneous digital volumes Problems • The representative 1-cycle of a homology generator in the AT-model must represent one true “tunnel” • If one succeed, the representative 1-cycle of a homology generator in the AT-model must “fits well” the tunnel (a good “geometric homology generator”)

  17. AT-model: At present, theoretical solution to deformation problems Simulation Deforming a homological 1-cycle (in red) to a homologous cycle (in black). More difficult in 3D!! To solve problems of topological tracking in FEA simulations. Objective: to determine fractures or topological changes. More dificult in 3D!!

  18. Tracking of “holes” in bone computational models?

  19. Finite Element Analysis (m_ FEA) DETERMINATION of BONE RIDIGITY IN A COMPUTATIONAL MODEL

  20. Some methods for getting homology • Algebraic-Topological thinning based on the sucesive application of integral operators erasing cells of the border of the objects for getting a topological skeleton • Merging internal cells for getting a homological segmentation “saving” the geometry of the border of the object. • Using an incremental technique of adding a simplex and updating the homology in each step. • In a regular grid (that is the case of digital object) to predetermine the integral operators of each simplex in the grid and to adapt this information to the corresponding subset.

  21. Integral operator and geometry ↓ ← ↗ ↖ ↖

  22. Integral Operators as algebraic generalization of gradient vector fields (Morse theory) • Let Φ:K→C be the integral operator defined by Φ(uk)= σ, for some simplices a and b. Φ Π=1-dΦ-Φd (Z[K],d) ( Z[K\ uk, σ}],],d-dΦd) incl

  23. Homological Thinning Φ f C(K)H(K) g

  24. An example of topological thinning Φ f C(K)H(K) g

  25. Homological Merging Φ f C(K)H(K) g

  26. Bibliography • [1] REAL P., GONZALEZ-DIAZ, R., 2004. Towards Digital Cohomology. Lecture Notes in Computer Science LNCS 2886, Springer-Verlag, 92-101. • [2] GONZALEZ-DIAZ, R., REAL, P., 2005. On the cohomology of 3D digital images. Discrete Applied Mathematics 147, 245-263 • [3] GONZALEZ-DIAZ, R., MEDRANO, B., REAL, P., SANCHEZ-PELAEZ, J. 2005. Understanding volumes from an algebraic topological perspective. Application of Computer Algebra ACA 2005, Julio 31-Agosto 3, Nara (Japón). Abstracts ACA2005, Editor: K. Shirayanagi,p. 30. ISBN: 4-903027-02-3. • [4] GONZALEZ-DIAZ, R., MEDRANO, B., REAL, P., SANCHEZ-PELAEZ, J., 2005. Algebraic-topological analysis of time-sequence of digital images. Lecture Notes in Computer Science LNCS 3718, 208-219. • [5] GONZALEZ-DIAZ, R., MEDRANO, B., REAL, P., SANCHEZ-PELAEZ, J., 2005. Técnicas Algebraicas para el Control Topológico en Imágenes Digitales. I Congreso Español de Informática (Sesión: XV Congreso Español de Informática Gráfica), Septiembre, 2005. Proceedings del XV CEIG, 201-210. • [6] GONZALEZ-DIAZ, R., MEDRANO, B., REAL, P., SANCHEZ-PELAEZ, J., 2005. Algebraic Topological Techniques in 3D and 4D digital Imagery. XVI Coloquio Latinoamericano de Algebra, Colonia (Uruguay). • [7] GONZALEZ-DIAZ R., Medrano B., SÁNCHEZ-PELÁEZ J., REAL P, 2006: Simplicial Perturbation Techniques and Effective Homology, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Volumen:4191, 166-177 • [8] GONZALEZ-DIAZ R., Medrano B., SÁNCHEZ-PELÁEZ J., REAL P, 2006: Reusing integer homology information in binary 3D digital images,: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Volumen: 4245, 199-210. • [9] REAL P., 2007: Análisis Topológico de imágenes 3D médicas: el ejemplo de Osteoporósis. XII Convención y Expo Internacional INFORMATICA 2007 (Salud). Lugar celebración: La Habana (Cuba)Fecha: 12 al 16 de Febrero de 2007.

  27. Emergent project of topological quantification of nD digital objects • Project R+D+I del MEC MTM2006-03722 “A New Model of algebraic-topological representation of digital volumes: the AT-model”. • Project R+D+I of Excelence of Junta Andalucia P06-TIC-02268 “Topological Analysis of nD digital images”. • Andalusian Reseach Group investigación FQM-296 “Computational Topology and Applied Mathematics”.

  28. Computational Homological Algebra Given a chain contraction: (f, g, Φ): C C’, it is clear that Φ is a chain homotopy operator satisfying ΦΦ =0 and ΦdΦ = Φ. • Reciprocaly, a chain homotopy operator Φ: Cq Cq+1, satisfying the conditions Φ Φ=0 and Φ d Φ = Φ gives rise to a chain contraction (f,g, Φ): C Im(π), where • π = 1- d Φ – Φ d, f=π and g=inclusion. (Lambe and Barnes, 1991) • In the casein which Φ also satisfies the condition d Φ d = d, then the associated chain contraction (f,g, Φ) connects C to its homology H(C). Φ π (C,d) ( Im(π),d-dΦd) incl Φ

  29. Integral operators and simplicity by pairs • Let C=Z[c] be a chain complex and Φ:C→C be the integral operator defined by Φ(a)=b, for some chains a,b. Φ Π=1-dΦ-Φd (C,d) ( Z[C\{a b}],d-dΦd) incl * Let C=Z[K] be the chain complex cannonically associated to a cell or simplicial complex K and Φ:K→C be the integral operator defined by Φ(a)=b, for some simplices a and b. Φ π (Z[K],d) ( Z[K\{a b}],d-dΦd) incl

  30. Integral operators for homology over a field (Type 1) Let K be a simplicial complex and σ a simplex of K of dimension t. If d(σ)=∑λiui, such that λk=1, for some k, take Φ:Kt-1→Kt defined by Φ(uk)= σ, and zero in the rest. Then Φ satisfy ΦΦ=0 and ΦdΦ=Φ and it generates the following chain contraction: Φ f (Z[K],d) ( Z[K\{uk, σ}],d-dΦd) g • (f, g, Φ)=(1-d Φ - Φ d, incl, Φ) : (Z[K],d) ↔ Z[K\{uk, σ}],d’) • f(uk)= -∑i≠kλiui; f(σ)=0 ; f(σ’)=σ’- ασ for σ’ \ d(σ’)= αuk+…; f=1 for the rest • This is equivalent to card({σ’}) column operations and one row operation in the matrix of the differential in dimension t, three line elimination operations in dimenstion t and t-1 and card({σ’}) row operations in dimension t+1 (basis changing). • If uk is face of only one simplex σ, there is no need to do a basis changing

  31. Integral operators for integer homology (Type 2) Let C a finite chain complex and σ be an element of C of degree t, basis of C. If d(σ)=∑λiui is such that λk≠1, for all I and g.c.d(λj, λk)=1[and 1= α λj+ βλk]for some pair of indices j and k, let us take Φ:Ct-1→Ct defined by Φ(uk)= ασ,Φ(uk)=βσ, and zero in the rest. Then Φ satisfy ΦΦ=0 and ΦdΦ=Φ and it generates the following chain contraction: Φ f (C,d) ( Z[C\{uj, σ}], d-dΦd) g • (f, g, Φ)=(1-d Φ - Φ d, incl, Φ) : (C,d) ↔ Z[C\{uj, σ}], d’) • f(uj)= (1-α) uj-∑i≠jλiui; • f(uk)= (1-β) uk-∑i≠kλiui ; • f(σ)=0; • f(σ’)=σ’- (γα+θβ) σ for σ’ \ d(σ’)= γuk+θuj…; f=1 for the rest

  32. Integral operators for integer homology (Type 3) Let C a finite chain complex and σ1 and σ2 be two elements of degree t of C, basis of C. If d(σr)=∑λi,rui (r=1,2) is such that g.c.d(λk1, λk2)=1 for some k [Bezout identity 1= α λk1+ βλk2], and let us take Φ:Ct-1→Ct defined by Φ(uk)= ασ1+βσ2, and zero in the rest. Then Φ satisfy ΦΦ=0 and ΦdΦ=Φ and it generates the following chain contraction: Φ f (C,d) ( Z[C\{uk, σ1}], d-dΦd) g • (f, g, Φ)=(1-d Φ - Φ d, incl, Φ) : (C,d) ↔ (Z[C\{uk, σ1}], d’) • f(uj)= (1-α) uj-∑i≠jλiui; • f(uk)= (1-β) uk-∑i≠kλiui ; f(σ)=0 • f(σ)=0 ; • f(σ’)=σ’- (γα+θβ) σ for σ’ \ d(σ’)= γuk+θuj…; f=1 for the rest

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