EVENT DETAILS AND ABSTRACT


Colloquium

Title: Dissimilarity distances between surfaces
Speaker: Ingrid Daubechies
Speaker Info: Duke University
Brief Description:
Special Note:
Abstract:

We describe new distances between pairs of two-dimensional surfaces (embedded in three-dimensional space) that use both local structures and global information in the surfaces. These are motivated by the need of biological morphologists to compare different phenotypical structures. At present, scientists using physical traits to study evolutionary relationships among living and extinct animals analyze data extracted from carefully defined anatomical correspondence points (landmarks). Identifying and recording these landmarks is time consuming and can be done accurately only by trained morphologists. This necessity renders these studies inaccessible to nonmorphologists and causes phenomics to lag behind genomics in elucidating evolutionary patterns. Unlike other algorithms presented for morphological correspondences, our approach does not require any preliminary marking of special features or landmarks by the user. It also differs from other seminal work in computational geometry in that our algorithms are polynomial in nature and thus faster, making pairwise comparisons feasible for significantly larger numbers of digitized surfaces. We illustrate our approach using three datasets representing teeth and different bones of primates and humans, and show that it leads to highly accurate results.
Date: Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Time: 4:10pm
Where: Lunt 105
Contact Person: Valentino Tosatti
Contact email: tosatti@math.northwestern.edu
Contact Phone:
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