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Virtual Dictionary
Back-Face Culling Back-Face Culling or BFC is a standard approach taken by 3D rendering engines, to help remove unnecessary items from the render view. Essentially, as the name implies, it is the removal of all polygonal faces or rendering triangles which face away from the viewpoint. I.e., all parts of a given object that are occluded from the viewer by other parts of the same object, as they are on the ?back? relative to the observer. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases which may match this term.
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Results by page [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] ![]() ![]() This book, written by a neuroscientist, proposes that use of technology such as social networking, where computer mediation rather than face to face communication is the order of the day, actively changes how our brains process information over time. ![]() ![]() ![]() In a handful of the more pioneering virtual environments, a system called FaceGen, along with other, similar systems, allows a user to photograph their face from front and side, and use that to put together a 3D model of their physical head, if they so desire, to use for the basis of their avatar presence online. Other technologies are just coming into use, that allow adjustments, based on attractiveness, of that face. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Industry
News containing the Term Back-Face Culling:
Results by page (02/12/2011)
Robotics researchers in Munich have joined forces with Japanese scientists to develop an ingenious technical solution that gives robots a human face. By using a projector to beam the 3D image of a face onto the back of a plastic mask, and a...
(02/11/2012)
When foot-and-mouth disease swept through the British countryside in early 2001, more than 10 million sheep, cattle and pigs were slaughtered to control the disease. Despite the devastation, the disease was contained within ten months in pa...
(14/05/2009)
Office workers who make time to chat face to face with colleagues may be far more productive than those who rely on e-mail, the phone, or Facebook, suggests a study carried out by researchers at MIT and New York University. T...
(17/09/2007)
University of Glasgow researcher Rob Jenkins has created an imaging tool which should bolster security and surveillance issues by recognising faces far better than any human. Currently, both people and computers are poor at r...
(02/10/2004)
Ever wondered how humans will look in 50 years time? An exhibition in London predicts the answer may lie in the digital world. As those who have followed medical news over the past year know, we are on the cusp of transferrin...
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