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Wikipedia

Computer graphics

Computer graphics deals with generating images and art with the aid of computers. Today, computer graphics is a core technology in digital photography, film, video games, digital art, cell phone and computer displays, and many specialized applications. A great deal of specialized hardware and software has been developed, with the displays of most devices being driven by computer graphics hardware. It is a vast and recently developed area of computer science. The phrase was coined in 1960 by computer graphics researchers Verne Hudson and William Fetter of Boeing. It is often abbreviated as CG, or typically in the context of film as computer generated imagery (CGI). The non-artistic aspects of computer graphics are the subject of computer science research.[1]

A Blender 2.45 screenshot displaying the 3D test model Suzanne

Some topics in computer graphics include user interface design, sprite graphics, rendering, ray tracing, geometry processing, computer animation, vector graphics, 3D modeling, shaders, GPU design, implicit surfaces, visualization, scientific computing, image processing, computational photography, scientific visualization, computational geometry and computer vision, among others. The overall methodology depends heavily on the underlying sciences of geometry, optics, physics, and perception.

Simulated flight over Trenta valley in the Julian Alps

Computer graphics is responsible for displaying art and image data effectively and meaningfully to the consumer. It is also used for processing image data received from the physical world, such as photo and video content. Computer graphics development has had a significant impact on many types of media and has revolutionized animation, movies, advertising, and video games, in general.

Overview

The term computer graphics has been used in a broad sense to describe "almost everything on computers that is not text or sound".[2] Typically, the term computer graphics refers to several different things:

  • the representation and manipulation of image data by a computer
  • the various technologies used to create and manipulate images
  • methods for digitally synthesizing and manipulating visual content, see study of computer graphics

Today, computer graphics is widespread. Such imagery is found in and on television, newspapers, weather reports, and in a variety of medical investigations and surgical procedures. A well-constructed graph can present complex statistics in a form that is easier to understand and interpret. In the media "such graphs are used to illustrate papers, reports, theses", and other presentation material.[3]

Many tools have been developed to visualize data. Computer-generated imagery can be categorized into several different types: two dimensional (2D), three dimensional (3D), and animated graphics. As technology has improved, 3D computer graphics have become more common, but 2D computer graphics are still widely used. Computer graphics has emerged as a sub-field of computer science which studies methods for digitally synthesizing and manipulating visual content. Over the past decade, other specialized fields have been developed like information visualization, and scientific visualization more concerned with "the visualization of three dimensional phenomena (architectural, meteorological, medical, biological, etc.), where the emphasis is on realistic renderings of volumes, surfaces, illumination sources, and so forth, perhaps with a dynamic (time) component".[4]

History

The precursor sciences to the development of modern computer graphics were the advances in electrical engineering, electronics, and television that took place during the first half of the twentieth century. Screens could display art since the Lumiere brothers' use of mattes to create special effects for the earliest films dating from 1895, but such displays were limited and not interactive. The first cathode ray tube, the Braun tube, was invented in 1897 – it in turn would permit the oscilloscope and the military control panel – the more direct precursors of the field, as they provided the first two-dimensional electronic displays that responded to programmatic or user input. Nevertheless, computer graphics remained relatively unknown as a discipline until the 1950s and the post-World War II period – during which time the discipline emerged from a combination of both pure university and laboratory academic research into more advanced computers and the United States military's further development of technologies like radar, advanced aviation, and rocketry developed during the war. New kinds of displays were needed to process the wealth of information resulting from such projects, leading to the development of computer graphics as a discipline.

1950s

 
SAGE Sector Control Room

Early projects like the Whirlwind and SAGE Projects introduced the CRT as a viable display and interaction interface and introduced the light pen as an input device. Douglas T. Ross of the Whirlwind SAGE system performed a personal experiment in which he wrote a small program that captured the movement of his finger and displayed its vector (his traced name) on a display scope. One of the first interactive video games to feature recognizable, interactive graphics – Tennis for Two – was created for an oscilloscope by William Higinbotham to entertain visitors in 1958 at Brookhaven National Laboratory and simulated a tennis match. In 1959, Douglas T. Ross innovated again while working at MIT on transforming mathematic statements into computer generated 3D machine tool vectors by taking the opportunity to create a display scope image of a Disney cartoon character.[5]

Electronics pioneer Hewlett-Packard went public in 1957 after incorporating the decade prior, and established strong ties with Stanford University through its founders, who were alumni. This began the decades-long transformation of the southern San Francisco Bay Area into the world's leading computer technology hub – now known as Silicon Valley. The field of computer graphics developed with the emergence of computer graphics hardware.

Further advances in computing led to greater advancements in interactive computer graphics. In 1959, the TX-2 computer was developed at MIT's Lincoln Laboratory. The TX-2 integrated a number of new man-machine interfaces. A light pen could be used to draw sketches on the computer using Ivan Sutherland's revolutionary Sketchpad software.[6] Using a light pen, Sketchpad allowed one to draw simple shapes on the computer screen, save them and even recall them later. The light pen itself had a small photoelectric cell in its tip. This cell emitted an electronic pulse whenever it was placed in front of a computer screen and the screen's electron gun fired directly at it. By simply timing the electronic pulse with the current location of the electron gun, it was easy to pinpoint exactly where the pen was on the screen at any given moment. Once that was determined, the computer could then draw a cursor at that location. Sutherland seemed to find the perfect solution for many of the graphics problems he faced. Even today, many standards of computer graphics interfaces got their start with this early Sketchpad program. One example of this is in drawing constraints. If one wants to draw a square for example, they do not have to worry about drawing four lines perfectly to form the edges of the box. One can simply specify that they want to draw a box, and then specify the location and size of the box. The software will then construct a perfect box, with the right dimensions and at the right location. Another example is that Sutherland's software modeled objects – not just a picture of objects. In other words, with a model of a car, one could change the size of the tires without affecting the rest of the car. It could stretch the body of car without deforming the tires.

1960s

 
Spacewar! running on the Computer History Museum's PDP-1

The phrase "computer graphics" has been credited to William Fetter, a graphic designer for Boeing in 1960. Fetter in turn attributed it to Verne Hudson, also at Boeing.[6][7]

In 1961 another student at MIT, Steve Russell, created another important title in the history of video games, Spacewar! Written for the DEC PDP-1, Spacewar was an instant success and copies started flowing to other PDP-1 owners and eventually DEC got a copy.[citation needed] The engineers at DEC used it as a diagnostic program on every new PDP-1 before shipping it. The sales force picked up on this quickly enough and when installing new units, would run the "world's first video game" for their new customers. (Higginbotham's Tennis For Two had beaten Spacewar by almost three years, but it was almost unknown outside of a research or academic setting.)

At around the same time (1961–1962) in the University of Cambridge, Elizabeth Waldram wrote code to display radio-astronomy maps on a cathode ray tube.[8]

E. E. Zajac, a scientist at Bell Telephone Laboratory (BTL), created a film called "Simulation of a two-giro gravity attitude control system" in 1963.[9] In this computer-generated film, Zajac showed how the attitude of a satellite could be altered as it orbits the Earth. He created the animation on an IBM 7090 mainframe computer. Also at BTL, Ken Knowlton, Frank Sinden, Ruth A. Weiss and Michael Noll started working in the computer graphics field. Sinden created a film called Force, Mass and Motion illustrating Newton's laws of motion in operation. Around the same time, other scientists were creating computer graphics to illustrate their research. At Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, Nelson Max created the films Flow of a Viscous Fluid and Propagation of Shock Waves in a Solid Form. Boeing Aircraft created a film called Vibration of an Aircraft.

Also sometime in the early 1960s, automobiles would also provide a boost through the early work of Pierre Bézier at Renault, who used Paul de Casteljau's curves – now called Bézier curves after Bézier's work in the field – to develop 3d modeling techniques for Renault car bodies. These curves would form the foundation for much curve-modeling work in the field, as curves – unlike polygons – are mathematically complex entities to draw and model well.

 
Pong arcade version

It was not long before major corporations started taking an interest in computer graphics. TRW, Lockheed-Georgia, General Electric and Sperry Rand are among the many companies that were getting started in computer graphics by the mid-1960s. IBM was quick to respond to this interest by releasing the IBM 2250 graphics terminal, the first commercially available graphics computer. Ralph Baer, a supervising engineer at Sanders Associates, came up with a home video game in 1966 that was later licensed to Magnavox and called the Odyssey. While very simplistic, and requiring fairly inexpensive electronic parts, it allowed the player to move points of light around on a screen. It was the first consumer computer graphics product. David C. Evans was director of engineering at Bendix Corporation's computer division from 1953 to 1962, after which he worked for the next five years as a visiting professor at Berkeley. There he continued his interest in computers and how they interfaced with people. In 1966, the University of Utah recruited Evans to form a computer science program, and computer graphics quickly became his primary interest. This new department would become the world's primary research center for computer graphics through the 1970s.

Also, in 1966, Ivan Sutherland continued to innovate at MIT when he invented the first computer-controlled head-mounted display (HMD). It displayed two separate wireframe images, one for each eye. This allowed the viewer to see the computer scene in stereoscopic 3D. The heavy hardware required for supporting the display and tracker was called the Sword of Damocles because of the potential danger if it were to fall upon the wearer. After receiving his Ph.D. from MIT, Sutherland became Director of Information Processing at ARPA (Advanced Research Projects Agency), and later became a professor at Harvard. In 1967 Sutherland was recruited by Evans to join the computer science program at the University of Utah – a development which would turn that department into one of the most important research centers in graphics for nearly a decade thereafter, eventually producing some of the most important pioneers in the field. There Sutherland perfected his HMD; twenty years later, NASA would re-discover his techniques in their virtual reality research. At Utah, Sutherland and Evans were highly sought after consultants by large companies, but they were frustrated at the lack of graphics hardware available at the time, so they started formulating a plan to start their own company.

In 1968, Dave Evans and Ivan Sutherland founded the first computer graphics hardware company, Evans & Sutherland. While Sutherland originally wanted the company to be located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Salt Lake City was instead chosen due to its proximity to the professors' research group at the University of Utah.

Also in 1968 Arthur Appel described the first ray casting algorithm, the first of a class of ray tracing-based rendering algorithms that have since become fundamental in achieving photorealism in graphics by modeling the paths that rays of light take from a light source, to surfaces in a scene, and into the camera.

In 1969, the ACM initiated A Special Interest Group on Graphics (SIGGRAPH) which organizes conferences, graphics standards, and publications within the field of computer graphics. By 1973, the first annual SIGGRAPH conference was held, which has become one of the focuses of the organization. SIGGRAPH has grown in size and importance as the field of computer graphics has expanded over time.

1970s

 
The Utah teapot by Martin Newell and its static renders became emblematic of CGI development during the 1970s.

Subsequently, a number of breakthroughs in the field – particularly important early breakthroughs in the transformation of graphics from utilitarian to realistic – occurred at the University of Utah in the 1970s, which had hired Ivan Sutherland. He was paired with David C. Evans to teach an advanced computer graphics class, which contributed a great deal of founding research to the field and taught several students who would grow to found several of the industry's most important companies – namely Pixar, Silicon Graphics, and Adobe Systems. Tom Stockham led the image processing group at UU which worked closely with the computer graphics lab.

One of these students was Edwin Catmull. Catmull had just come from The Boeing Company and had been working on his degree in physics. Growing up on Disney, Catmull loved animation yet quickly discovered that he did not have the talent for drawing. Now Catmull (along with many others) saw computers as the natural progression of animation and they wanted to be part of the revolution. The first computer animation that Catmull saw was his own. He created an animation of his hand opening and closing. He also pioneered texture mapping to paint textures on three-dimensional models in 1974, now considered one of the fundamental techniques in 3D modeling. It became one of his goals to produce a feature-length motion picture using computer graphics – a goal he would achieve two decades later after his founding role in Pixar. In the same class, Fred Parke created an animation of his wife's face. The two animations were included in the 1976 feature film Futureworld.

As the UU computer graphics laboratory was attracting people from all over, John Warnock was another of those early pioneers; he later founded Adobe Systems and create a revolution in the publishing world with his PostScript page description language, and Adobe would go on later to create the industry standard photo editing software in Adobe Photoshop and a prominent movie industry special effects program in Adobe After Effects.

James Clark was also there; he later founded Silicon Graphics, a maker of advanced rendering systems that would dominate the field of high-end graphics until the early 1990s.

A major advance in 3D computer graphics was created at UU by these early pioneers – hidden surface determination. In order to draw a representation of a 3D object on the screen, the computer must determine which surfaces are "behind" the object from the viewer's perspective, and thus should be "hidden" when the computer creates (or renders) the image. The 3D Core Graphics System (or Core) was the first graphical standard to be developed. A group of 25 experts of the ACM Special Interest Group SIGGRAPH developed this "conceptual framework". The specifications were published in 1977, and it became a foundation for many future developments in the field.

Also in the 1970s, Henri Gouraud, Jim Blinn and Bui Tuong Phong contributed to the foundations of shading in CGI via the development of the Gouraud shading and Blinn–Phong shading models, allowing graphics to move beyond a "flat" look to a look more accurately portraying depth. Jim Blinn also innovated further in 1978 by introducing bump mapping, a technique for simulating uneven surfaces, and the predecessor to many more advanced kinds of mapping used today.

The modern videogame arcade as is known today was birthed in the 1970s, with the first arcade games using real-time 2D sprite graphics. Pong in 1972 was one of the first hit arcade cabinet games. Speed Race in 1974 featured sprites moving along a vertically scrolling road. Gun Fight in 1975 featured human-looking animated characters, while Space Invaders in 1978 featured a large number of animated figures on screen; both used a specialized barrel shifter circuit made from discrete chips to help their Intel 8080 microprocessor animate their framebuffer graphics.

1980s

 
Donkey Kong was one of the video games that helped to popularize computer graphics to a mass audience in the 1980s.

The 1980s began to see the modernization and commercialization of computer graphics. As the home computer proliferated, a subject which had previously been an academics-only discipline was adopted by a much larger audience, and the number of computer graphics developers increased significantly.

In the early 1980s, metal–oxide–semiconductor (MOS) very-large-scale integration (VLSI) technology led to the availability of 16-bit central processing unit (CPU) microprocessors and the first graphics processing unit (GPU) chips, which began to revolutionize computer graphics, enabling high-resolution graphics for computer graphics terminals as well as personal computer (PC) systems. NEC's µPD7220 was the first GPU, fabricated on a fully integrated NMOS VLSI chip. It supported up to 1024x1024 resolution, and laid the foundations for the emerging PC graphics market. It was used in a number of graphics cards, and was licensed for clones such as the Intel 82720, the first of Intel's graphics processing units.[10] MOS memory also became cheaper in the early 1980s, enabling the development of affordable framebuffer memory,[11] notably video RAM (VRAM) introduced by Texas Instruments (TI) in the mid-1980s.[12] In 1984, Hitachi released the ARTC HD63484, the first complementary MOS (CMOS) GPU. It was capable of displaying high-resolution in color mode and up to 4K resolution in monochrome mode, and it was used in a number of graphics cards and terminals during the late 1980s.[13] In 1986, TI introduced the TMS34010, the first fully programmable MOS graphics processor.[12]

Computer graphics terminals during this decade became increasingly intelligent, semi-standalone and standalone workstations. Graphics and application processing were increasingly migrated to the intelligence in the workstation, rather than continuing to rely on central mainframe and mini-computers. Typical of the early move to high-resolution computer graphics intelligent workstations for the computer-aided engineering market were the Orca 1000, 2000 and 3000 workstations, developed by Orcatech of Ottawa, a spin-off from Bell-Northern Research, and led by David Pearson, an early workstation pioneer. The Orca 3000 was based on the 16-bit Motorola 68000 microprocessor and AMD bit-slice processors, and had Unix as its operating system. It was targeted squarely at the sophisticated end of the design engineering sector. Artists and graphic designers began to see the personal computer, particularly the Amiga and Macintosh, as a serious design tool, one that could save time and draw more accurately than other methods. The Macintosh remains a highly popular tool for computer graphics among graphic design studios and businesses. Modern computers, dating from the 1980s, often use graphical user interfaces (GUI) to present data and information with symbols, icons and pictures, rather than text. Graphics are one of the five key elements of multimedia technology.

In the field of realistic rendering, Japan's Osaka University developed the LINKS-1 Computer Graphics System, a supercomputer that used up to 257 Zilog Z8001 microprocessors, in 1982, for the purpose of rendering realistic 3D computer graphics. According to the Information Processing Society of Japan: "The core of 3D image rendering is calculating the luminance of each pixel making up a rendered surface from the given viewpoint, light source, and object position. The LINKS-1 system was developed to realize an image rendering methodology in which each pixel could be parallel processed independently using ray tracing. By developing a new software methodology specifically for high-speed image rendering, LINKS-1 was able to rapidly render highly realistic images."[14] The LINKS-1 was the world's most powerful computer, as of 1984.[15]

Also in the field of realistic rendering, the general rendering equation of David Immel and James Kajiya was developed in 1986 – an important step towards implementing global illumination, which is necessary to pursue photorealism in computer graphics.

The continuing popularity of Star Wars and other science fiction franchises were relevant in cinematic CGI at this time, as Lucasfilm and Industrial Light & Magic became known as the "go-to" house by many other studios for topnotch computer graphics in film. Important advances in chroma keying ("bluescreening", etc.) were made for the later films of the original trilogy. Two other pieces of video would also outlast the era as historically relevant: Dire Straits' iconic, near-fully-CGI video for their song "Money for Nothing" in 1985, which popularized CGI among music fans of that era, and a scene from Young Sherlock Holmes the same year featuring the first fully CGI character in a feature movie (an animated stained-glass knight). In 1988, the first shaders – small programs designed specifically to do shading as a separate algorithm – were developed by Pixar, which had already spun off from Industrial Light & Magic as a separate entity – though the public would not see the results of such technological progress until the next decade. In the late 1980s, Silicon Graphics (SGI) computers were used to create some of the first fully computer-generated short films at Pixar, and Silicon Graphics machines were considered a high-water mark for the field during the decade.

The 1980s is also called the golden era of videogames; millions-selling systems from Atari, Nintendo and Sega, among other companies, exposed computer graphics for the first time to a new, young, and impressionable audience – as did MS-DOS-based personal computers, Apple IIs, Macs, and Amigas, all of which also allowed users to program their own games if skilled enough. For the arcades, advances were made in commercial, real-time 3D graphics. In 1988, the first dedicated real-time 3D graphics boards were introduced for arcades, with the Namco System 21[16] and Taito Air System.[17] On the professional side, Evans & Sutherland and SGI developed 3D raster graphics hardware that directly influenced the later single-chip graphics processing unit (GPU), a technology where a separate and very powerful chip is used in parallel processing with a CPU to optimize graphics.

The decade also saw computer graphics applied to many additional professional markets, including location-based entertainment and education with the E&S Digistar, vehicle design, vehicle simulation, and chemistry.

1990s

 
Quarxs, series poster, Maurice Benayoun, François Schuiten, 1992

The 1990s' overwhelming note was the emergence of 3D modeling on a mass scale and an impressive rise in the quality of CGI generally. Home computers became able to take on rendering tasks that previously had been limited to workstations costing thousands of dollars; as 3D modelers became available for home systems, the popularity of Silicon Graphics workstations declined and powerful Microsoft Windows and Apple Macintosh machines running Autodesk products like 3D Studio or other home rendering software ascended in importance. By the end of the decade, the GPU would begin its rise to the prominence it still enjoys today.

The field began to see the first rendered graphics that could truly pass as photorealistic to the untrained eye (though they could not yet do so with a trained CGI artist) and 3D graphics became far more popular in gaming, multimedia, and animation. At the end of the 1980s and the beginning of the nineties were created, in France, the very first computer graphics TV series: La Vie des bêtes by studio Mac Guff Ligne (1988), Les Fables Géométriques (1989–1991) by studio Fantôme, and Quarxs, the first HDTV computer graphics series by Maurice Benayoun and François Schuiten (studio Z-A production, 1990–1993).

In film, Pixar began its serious commercial rise in this era under Edwin Catmull, with its first major film release, in 1995 – Toy Story – a critical and commercial success of nine-figure magnitude. The studio to invent the programmable shader would go on to have many animated hits, and its work on prerendered video animation is still considered an industry leader and research trail breaker.

In video games, in 1992, Virtua Racing, running on the Sega Model 1 arcade system board, laid the foundations for fully 3D racing games and popularized real-time 3D polygonal graphics among a wider audience in the video game industry.[18] The Sega Model 2 in 1993 and Sega Model 3 in 1996 subsequently pushed the boundaries of commercial, real-time 3D graphics. Back on the PC, Wolfenstein 3D, Doom and Quake, three of the first massively popular 3D first-person shooter games, were released by id Software to critical and popular acclaim during this decade using a rendering engine innovated[vague] primarily by John Carmack. The Sony PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and Nintendo 64, among other consoles, sold in the millions and popularized 3D graphics for home gamers. Certain late-1990s first-generation 3D titles became seen as influential in popularizing 3D graphics among console users, such as platform games Super Mario 64 and The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, and early 3D fighting games like Virtua Fighter, Battle Arena Toshinden, and Tekken.

Technology and algorithms for rendering continued to improve greatly. In 1996, Krishnamurty and Levoy invented normal mapping – an improvement on Jim Blinn's bump mapping. 1999 saw Nvidia release the seminal GeForce 256, the first home video card billed as a graphics processing unit or GPU, which in its own words contained "integrated transform, lighting, triangle setup/clipping, and rendering engines". By the end of the decade, computers adopted common frameworks for graphics processing such as DirectX and OpenGL. Since then, computer graphics have only become more detailed and realistic, due to more powerful graphics hardware and 3D modeling software. AMD also became a leading developer of graphics boards in this decade, creating a "duopoly" in the field which exists this day.

2000s

 
A screenshot from the videogame Killing Floor, built in Unreal Engine 2. Personal computers and console video games took a great graphical leap forward in the 2000s, becoming able to display graphics in real time computing that had previously only been possible pre-rendered and/or on business-level hardware.

CGI became ubiquitous in earnest during this era. Video games and CGI cinema had spread the reach of computer graphics to the mainstream by the late 1990s and continued to do so at an accelerated pace in the 2000s. CGI was also adopted en masse for television advertisements widely in the late 1990s and 2000s, and so became familiar to a massive audience.

The continued rise and increasing sophistication of the graphics processing unit were crucial to this decade, and 3D rendering capabilities became a standard feature as 3D-graphics GPUs became considered a necessity for desktop computer makers to offer. The Nvidia GeForce line of graphics cards dominated the market in the early decade with occasional significant competing presence from ATI.[19] As the decade progressed, even low-end machines usually contained a 3D-capable GPU of some kind as Nvidia and AMD both introduced low-priced chipsets and continued to dominate the market. Shaders which had been introduced in the 1980s to perform specialized processing on the GPU would by the end of the decade become supported on most consumer hardware, speeding up graphics considerably and allowing for greatly improved texture and shading in computer graphics via the widespread adoption of normal mapping, bump mapping, and a variety of other techniques allowing the simulation of a great amount of detail.

Computer graphics used in films and video games gradually began to be realistic to the point of entering the uncanny valley. CGI movies proliferated, with traditional animated cartoon films like Ice Age and Madagascar as well as numerous Pixar offerings like Finding Nemo dominating the box office in this field. The Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, released in 2001, was the first fully computer-generated feature film to use photorealistic CGI characters and be fully made with motion capture.[20] The film was not a box-office success, however.[21] Some commentators have suggested this may be partly because the lead CGI characters had facial features which fell into the "uncanny valley".[note 1] Other animated films like The Polar Express drew attention at this time as well. Star Wars also resurfaced with its prequel trilogy and the effects continued to set a bar for CGI in film.

In videogames, the Sony PlayStation 2 and 3, the Microsoft Xbox line of consoles, and offerings from Nintendo such as the GameCube maintained a large following, as did the Windows PC. Marquee CGI-heavy titles like the series of Grand Theft Auto, Assassin's Creed, Final Fantasy, BioShock, Kingdom Hearts, Mirror's Edge and dozens of others continued to approach photorealism, grow the video game industry and impress, until that industry's revenues became comparable to those of movies. Microsoft made a decision to expose DirectX more easily to the independent developer world with the XNA program, but it was not a success. DirectX itself remained a commercial success, however. OpenGL continued to mature as well, and it and DirectX improved greatly; the second-generation shader languages HLSL and GLSL began to be popular in this decade.

In scientific computing, the GPGPU technique to pass large amounts of data bidirectionally between a GPU and CPU was invented; speeding up analysis on many kinds of bioinformatics and molecular biology experiments. The technique has also been used for Bitcoin mining and has applications in computer vision.

2010s

 
A diamond plate texture rendered close-up using physically based rendering principles – increasingly an active area of research for computer graphics in the 2010s

In the 2010s, CGI has been nearly ubiquitous in video, pre-rendered graphics are nearly scientifically photorealistic, and real-time graphics on a suitably high-end system may simulate photorealism to the untrained eye.

Texture mapping has matured into a multistage process with many layers; generally, it is not uncommon to implement texture mapping, bump mapping or isosurfaces or normal mapping, lighting maps including specular highlights and reflection techniques, and shadow volumes into one rendering engine using shaders, which are maturing considerably. Shaders are now very nearly a necessity for advanced work in the field, providing considerable complexity in manipulating pixels, vertices, and textures on a per-element basis, and countless possible effects. Their shader languages HLSL and GLSL are active fields of research and development. Physically based rendering or PBR, which implements many maps and performs advanced calculation to simulate real optic light flow, is an active research area as well, along with advanced areas like ambient occlusion, subsurface scattering, Rayleigh scattering, photon mapping, and many others. Experiments into the processing power required to provide graphics in real time at ultra-high-resolution modes like 4K Ultra HD are beginning, though beyond reach of all but the highest-end hardware.

In cinema, most animated movies are CGI now; a great many animated CGI films are made per year, but few, if any, attempt photorealism due to continuing fears of the uncanny valley. Most are 3D cartoons.

In videogames, the Microsoft Xbox One, Sony PlayStation 4, and Nintendo Switch dominated the home space and were all capable of advanced 3D graphics; the Windows PC was still one of the most active gaming platforms as well.

Image types

Two-dimensional

 
Raster graphic sprites (left) and masks (right)

2D computer graphics are the computer-based generation of digital images—mostly from models, such as digital image, and by techniques specific to them.

2D computer graphics are mainly used in applications that were originally developed upon traditional printing and drawing technologies such as typography. In those applications, the two-dimensional image is not just a representation of a real-world object, but an independent artifact with added semantic value; two-dimensional models are therefore preferred because they give more direct control of the image than 3D computer graphics, whose approach is more akin to photography than to typography.

Pixel art

A large form of digital art, pixel art is created through the use of raster graphics software, where images are edited on the pixel level. Graphics in most old (or relatively limited) computer and video games, graphing calculator games, and many mobile phone games are mostly pixel art.

Sprite graphics

A sprite is a two-dimensional image or animation that is integrated into a larger scene. Initially including just graphical objects handled separately from the memory bitmap of a video display, this now includes various manners of graphical overlays.

Originally, sprites were a method of integrating unrelated bitmaps so that they appeared to be part of the normal bitmap on a screen, such as creating an animated character that can be moved on a screen without altering the data defining the overall screen. Such sprites can be created by either electronic circuitry or software. In circuitry, a hardware sprite is a hardware construct that employs custom DMA channels to integrate visual elements with the main screen in that it super-imposes two discrete video sources. Software can simulate this through specialized rendering methods.

Vector graphics

 
Example showing effect of vector graphics versus raster (bitmap) graphics

Vector graphics formats are complementary to raster graphics. Raster graphics is the representation of images as an array of pixels and is typically used for the representation of photographic images.[22] Vector graphics consists in encoding information about shapes and colors that comprise the image, which can allow for more flexibility in rendering. There are instances when working with vector tools and formats is best practice, and instances when working with raster tools and formats is best practice. There are times when both formats come together. An understanding of the advantages and limitations of each technology and the relationship between them is most likely to result in efficient and effective use of tools.

Generative machine-learning models

 
Stable Diffusion output for the prompt "an astronaut riding a horse, by Hiroshige", 2022

Since the mid-2010s, as a result of advances in deep neural networks, models have been created which take as input a natural language description and produces as output an image matching that description. Text-to-image models generally combine a language model, which transforms the input text into a latent representation, and a generative image model, which produces an image conditioned on that representation. The most effective models have generally been trained on massive amounts of image and text data scraped from the web. By 2022, the best of these models, for example Dall-E 2 and Stable Diffusion, are able to create images in a range of styles, ranging from imitations of living artists to near-photorealistic, in a matter of seconds, given powerful enough hardware.[23]

Three-dimensional

3D graphics, compared to 2D graphics, are graphics that use a three-dimensional representation of geometric data. For the purpose of performance, this is stored in the computer. This includes images that may be for later display or for real-time viewing.

Despite these differences, 3D computer graphics rely on similar algorithms as 2D computer graphics do in the frame and raster graphics (like in 2D) in the final rendered display. In computer graphics software, the distinction between 2D and 3D is occasionally blurred; 2D applications may use 3D techniques to achieve effects such as lighting, and primarily 3D may use 2D rendering techniques.

3D computer graphics are the same as 3D models. The model is contained within the graphical data file, apart from the rendering. However, there are differences that include the 3D model is the representation of any 3D object. Until visually displayed a model is not graphic. Due to printing, 3D models are not only confined to virtual space. 3D rendering is how a model can be displayed. Also can be used in non-graphical computer simulations and calculations.

Computer animation

 
Example of Computer animation produced using Motion capture
 
Fractal landscape, an example of computer-generated imagery

Computer animation is the art of creating moving images via the use of computers. It is a subfield of computer graphics and animation. Increasingly it is created by means of 3D computer graphics, though 2D computer graphics are still widely used for stylistic, low bandwidth, and faster real-time rendering needs. Sometimes the target of the animation is the computer itself, but sometimes the target is another medium, such as film. It is also referred to as CGI (Computer-generated imagery or computer-generated imaging), especially when used in films.

Virtual entities may contain and be controlled by assorted attributes, such as transform values (location, orientation, and scale) stored in an object's transformation matrix. Animation is the change of an attribute over time. Multiple methods of achieving animation exist; the rudimentary form is based on the creation and editing of keyframes, each storing a value at a given time, per attribute to be animated. The 2D/3D graphics software will change with each keyframe, creating an editable curve of a value mapped over time, in which results in animation. Other methods of animation include procedural and expression-based techniques: the former consolidates related elements of animated entities into sets of attributes, useful for creating particle effects and crowd simulations; the latter allows an evaluated result returned from a user-defined logical expression, coupled with mathematics, to automate animation in a predictable way (convenient for controlling bone behavior beyond what a hierarchy offers in skeletal system set up).

To create the illusion of movement, an image is displayed on the computer screen then quickly replaced by a new image that is similar to the previous image, but shifted slightly. This technique is identical to the illusion of movement in television and motion pictures.

Concepts and principles

Images are typically created by devices such as cameras, mirrors, lenses, telescopes, microscopes, etc.

Digital images include both vector images and raster images, but raster images are more commonly used.

Pixel

 
In the enlarged portion of the image individual pixels are rendered as squares and can be easily seen.

In digital imaging, a pixel (or picture element[24]) is a single point in a raster image. Pixels are placed on a regular 2-dimensional grid, and are often represented using dots or squares. Each pixel is a sample of an original image, where more samples typically provide a more accurate representation of the original. The intensity of each pixel is variable; in color systems, each pixel has typically three components such as red, green, and blue.

Graphics are visual presentations on a surface, such as a computer screen. Examples are photographs, drawing, graphics designs, maps, engineering drawings, or other images. Graphics often combine text and illustration. Graphic design may consist of the deliberate selection, creation, or arrangement of typography alone, as in a brochure, flier, poster, web site, or book without any other element. Clarity or effective communication may be the objective, association with other cultural elements may be sought, or merely, the creation of a distinctive style.

Primitives

Primitives are basic units which a graphics system may combine to create more complex images or models. Examples would be sprites and character maps in 2D video games, geometric primitives in CAD, or polygons or triangles in 3D rendering. Primitives may be supported in hardware for efficient rendering, or the building blocks provided by a graphics application.

Rendering

Rendering is the generation of a 2D image from a 3D model by means of computer programs. A scene file contains objects in a strictly defined language or data structure; it would contain geometry, viewpoint, texture, lighting, and shading information as a description of the virtual scene.[25] The data contained in the scene file is then passed to a rendering program to be processed and output to a digital image or raster graphics image file. The rendering program is usually built into the computer graphics software, though others are available as plug-ins or entirely separate programs. The term "rendering" may be by analogy with an "artist's rendering" of a scene. Although the technical details of rendering methods vary, the general challenges to overcome in producing a 2D image from a 3D representation stored in a scene file are outlined as the graphics pipeline along a rendering device, such as a GPU. A GPU is a device able to assist the CPU in calculations. If a scene is to look relatively realistic and predictable under virtual lighting, the rendering software should solve the rendering equation. The rendering equation does not account for all lighting phenomena, but is a general lighting model for computer-generated imagery. 'Rendering' is also used to describe the process of calculating effects in a video editing file to produce final video output.

3D projection
3D projection is a method of mapping three dimensional points to a two dimensional plane. As most current methods for displaying graphical data are based on planar two dimensional media, the use of this type of projection is widespread. This method is used in most real-time 3D applications and typically uses rasterization to produce the final image.
Ray tracing
Ray tracing is a technique from the family of image order algorithms for generating an image by tracing the path of light through pixels in an image plane. The technique is capable of producing a high degree of photorealism; usually higher than that of typical scanline rendering methods, but at a greater computational cost.
Shading
 
Example of shading
Shading refers to depicting depth in 3D models or illustrations by varying levels of darkness. It is a process used in drawing for depicting levels of darkness on paper by applying media more densely or with a darker shade for darker areas, and less densely or with a lighter shade for lighter areas. There are various techniques of shading including cross hatching where perpendicular lines of varying closeness are drawn in a grid pattern to shade an area. The closer the lines are together, the darker the area appears. Likewise, the farther apart the lines are, the lighter the area appears. The term has been recently generalized to mean that shaders are applied.
Texture mapping
Texture mapping is a method for adding detail, surface texture, or colour to a computer-generated graphic or 3D model. Its application to 3D graphics was pioneered by Dr Edwin Catmull in 1974. A texture map is applied (mapped) to the surface of a shape, or polygon. This process is akin to applying patterned paper to a plain white box. Multitexturing is the use of more than one texture at a time on a polygon.[26] Procedural textures (created from adjusting parameters of an underlying algorithm that produces an output texture), and bitmap textures (created in an image editing application or imported from a digital camera) are, generally speaking, common methods of implementing texture definition on 3D models in computer graphics software, while intended placement of textures onto a model's surface often requires a technique known as UV mapping (arbitrary, manual layout of texture coordinates) for polygon surfaces, while non-uniform rational B-spline (NURB) surfaces have their own intrinsic parameterization used as texture coordinates. Texture mapping as a discipline also encompasses techniques for creating normal maps and bump maps that correspond to a texture to simulate height and specular maps to help simulate shine and light reflections, as well as environment mapping to simulate mirror-like reflectivity, also called gloss.
Anti-aliasing
Rendering resolution-independent entities (such as 3D models) for viewing on a raster (pixel-based) device such as a liquid-crystal display or CRT television inevitably causes aliasing artifacts mostly along geometric edges and the boundaries of texture details; these artifacts are informally called "jaggies". Anti-aliasing methods rectify such problems, resulting in imagery more pleasing to the viewer, but can be somewhat computationally expensive. Various anti-aliasing algorithms (such as supersampling) are able to be employed, then customized for the most efficient rendering performance versus quality of the resultant imagery; a graphics artist should consider this trade-off if anti-aliasing methods are to be used. A pre-anti-aliased bitmap texture being displayed on a screen (or screen location) at a resolution different from the resolution of the texture itself (such as a textured model in the distance from the virtual camera) will exhibit aliasing artifacts, while any procedurally defined texture will always show aliasing artifacts as they are resolution-independent; techniques such as mipmapping and texture filtering help to solve texture-related aliasing problems.

Volume rendering

 
Volume rendered CT scan of a forearm with different colour schemes for muscle, fat, bone, and blood

Volume rendering is a technique used to display a 2D projection of a 3D discretely sampled data set. A typical 3D data set is a group of 2D slice images acquired by a CT or MRI scanner.

Usually these are acquired in a regular pattern (e.g., one slice every millimeter) and usually have a regular number of image pixels in a regular pattern. This is an example of a regular volumetric grid, with each volume element, or voxel represented by a single value that is obtained by sampling the immediate area surrounding the voxel.

3D modeling

3D modeling is the process of developing a mathematical, wireframe representation of any three-dimensional object, called a "3D model", via specialized software. Models may be created automatically or manually; the manual modeling process of preparing geometric data for 3D computer graphics is similar to plastic arts such as sculpting. 3D models may be created using multiple approaches: use of NURBs to generate accurate and smooth surface patches, polygonal mesh modeling (manipulation of faceted geometry), or polygonal mesh subdivision (advanced tessellation of polygons, resulting in smooth surfaces similar to NURB models). A 3D model can be displayed as a two-dimensional image through a process called 3D rendering, used in a computer simulation of physical phenomena, or animated directly for other purposes. The model can also be physically created using 3D Printing devices.

Pioneers in computer graphics

Charles Csuri
Charles Csuri is a pioneer in computer animation and digital fine art and created the first computer art in 1964. Csuri was recognized by Smithsonian as the father of digital art and computer animation, and as a pioneer of computer animation by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and Association for Computing Machinery-SIGGRAPH.
Donald P. Greenberg
Donald P. Greenberg is a leading innovator in computer graphics. Greenberg has authored hundreds of articles and served as a teacher and mentor to many prominent computer graphic artists, animators, and researchers such as Robert L. Cook, Marc Levoy, Brian A. Barsky, and Wayne Lytle. Many of his former students have won Academy Awards for technical achievements and several have won the SIGGRAPH Achievement Award. Greenberg was the founding director of the NSF Center for Computer Graphics and Scientific Visualization.
A. Michael Noll
Noll was one of the first researchers to use a digital computer to create artistic patterns and to formalize the use of random processes in the creation of visual arts. He began creating digital art in 1962, making him one of the earliest digital artists. In 1965, Noll along with Frieder Nake and Georg Nees were the first to publicly exhibit their computer art. During April 1965, the Howard Wise Gallery exhibited Noll's computer art along with random-dot patterns by Bela Julesz.

Other pioneers

 
A modern render of the Utah teapot, an iconic model in 3D computer graphics created by Martin Newell, 1975

Organizations

Study of computer graphics

The study of computer graphics is a sub-field of computer science which studies methods for digitally synthesizing and manipulating visual content. Although the term often refers to three-dimensional computer graphics, it also encompasses two-dimensional graphics and image processing.

As an academic discipline, computer graphics studies the manipulation of visual and geometric information using computational techniques. It focuses on the mathematical and computational foundations of image generation and processing rather than purely aesthetic issues. Computer graphics is often differentiated from the field of visualization, although the two fields have many similarities.

Applications

Computer graphics may be used in the following areas:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The uncanny valley is a hypothesis in the field of robotics and 3D computer animation, which holds that when human replicas look and act almost, but not perfectly, like actual human beings, it causes a response of revulsion among human observers. The concept "valley" refers to the dip in a graph of the comfort level of humans as a function of a robot's human likeness.

References

  1. ^ . Association for Computing Machinery. September 21, 2016. Archived from the original on Jul 28, 2020. Retrieved 2020-04-28.
  2. ^ "What is Computer Graphics?". Cornell University Program of Computer Graphics. 15 April 1998.
  3. ^ . University of Leeds. Archived from the original on 2015-01-06.
  4. ^ Michael Friendly (2008). "Milestones in the history of thematic cartography, statistical graphics, and data visualization".
  5. ^ From the Vault of MIT (Jan 20, 2016). "MIT Science Reporter—"Automatically Programmed Tools" (1959)". YouTube.
  6. ^ a b Carlson, Wayne (2003). . Archived from the original on April 5, 2007.
  7. ^ Peddie, Jon (2013). The History of Visual Magic in Computers: How Beautiful Images are Made in CAD, 3D, VR and AR. Springer. p. 101. ISBN 978-1447149316.
  8. ^ EDSAC 1 and after – a compilation of personal reminiscences, Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  9. ^ David Salomon (1999). Computer graphics and geometric modeling. p. ix
  10. ^ Peddie, Jon. "Famous Graphics Chips: NEC µPD7220 Graphics Display Controller – The first graphics processor chip". IEEE Computer Society. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. Retrieved 1 November 2019.
  11. ^ Goldwasser, S.M. (June 1983). Computer Architecture For Interactive Display Of Segmented Imagery. Computer Architectures for Spatially Distributed Data. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 75–94 (81). ISBN 9783642821509.
  12. ^ a b Peddie, Jon. "Famous Graphics Chips: TI TMS34010 and VRAM". IEEE Computer Society. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. Retrieved 1 November 2019.
  13. ^ Peddie, Jon. "GPU History: Hitachi ARTC HD63484. The second graphics processor". IEEE Computer Society. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. Retrieved 1 November 2019.
  14. ^ Information Processing Society of Japan. "LINKS-1 Computer Graphics System-Computer Museum". Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  15. ^ Defanti, Thomas A. (1984). "The Mass Impact of Videogame Technology" (PDF). Advances in Computers. 23: 121. doi:10.1016/S0065-2458(08)60463-5. ISBN 9780120121236. ISSN 0065-2458. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  16. ^ "System 16 – Namco System 21 Hardware (Namco)". Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  17. ^ "System 16 – Taito Air System Hardware (Taito)". Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  18. ^ . 15 Most Influential Games of All Time. GameSpot. 14 March 2001. Archived from the original on 2010-04-12. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
  19. ^ The Future Of Computer Graphics Daniel Sevo, 2005 (retrieved 26 February 2015)
  20. ^ Chris Taylor, Time, 31 July 2000 (retrieved 8 August 2012).
  21. ^ Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within at Box Office Mojo (retrieved 12 August 2012).
  22. ^ Greenberg, Ira (2007). Processing: Creative Coding and Computational Art. Apress. ISBN 978-1-59059-617-3.
  23. ^ Vincent, James (May 24, 2022). "All these images were generated by Google's latest text-to-image AI". The Verge. Vox Media. Retrieved May 28, 2022.
  24. ^ Graf, Rudolf F. (1999). Modern Dictionary of Electronics. Oxford, England: Newnes. p. 569. ISBN 0-7506-4331-5.
  25. ^ "Lighting principles for 3D artists from film and art". GarageFarm. 2021-07-21. Retrieved 2021-07-21.
  26. ^ Blythe, David. Advanced Graphics Programming Techniques Using OpenGL. Siggraph 1999. (see: Multitexture)

Further reading

  • L. Ammeraal and K. Zhang (2007). Computer Graphics for Java Programmers, Second Edition, John-Wiley & Sons, ISBN 978-0-470-03160-5.
  • David Rogers (1998). Procedural Elements for Computer Graphics. McGraw-Hill.
  • James D. Foley, Andries Van Dam, Steven K. Feiner and John F. Hughes (1995). Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice. Addison-Wesley.
  • Donald Hearn and M. Pauline Baker (1994). Computer Graphics. Prentice-Hall.
  • Francis S. Hill (2001). Computer Graphics. Prentice Hall.
  • John Lewell (1985). Computer Graphics: A Survey of Current Techniques and Applications. Van Nostrand Reinhold.
  • Jeffrey J. McConnell (2006). Computer Graphics: Theory Into Practice. Jones & Bartlett Publishers.
  • R. D. Parslow, R. W. Prowse, Richard Elliot Green (1969). Computer Graphics: Techniques and Applications.
  • Peter Shirley and others. (2005). Fundamentals of computer graphics. A.K. Peters, Ltd.
  • M. Slater, A. Steed, Y. Chrysantho (2002). Computer graphics and virtual environments: from realism to real-time. Addison-Wesley.
  • Wolfgang Höhl (2008): Interactive environments with open-source software, Springer Wien New York, ISBN 3-211-79169-8

External links

  • (archived 5 April 2007)
  • (archived 2 March 2007)
  • Computer Graphics research at UC Berkeley
  • Thomas Dreher: History of Computer Art, chap. IV.2 Computer Animation
  • History of Computer Graphics on RUS

computer, graphics, more, specific, scientific, fields, computer, science, other, uses, disambiguation, deals, with, generating, images, with, computers, today, computer, graphics, core, technology, digital, photography, film, video, games, digital, cell, phon. For more specific scientific fields see Computer graphics computer science For other uses see Computer graphics disambiguation Computer graphics deals with generating images and art with the aid of computers Today computer graphics is a core technology in digital photography film video games digital art cell phone and computer displays and many specialized applications A great deal of specialized hardware and software has been developed with the displays of most devices being driven by computer graphics hardware It is a vast and recently developed area of computer science The phrase was coined in 1960 by computer graphics researchers Verne Hudson and William Fetter of Boeing It is often abbreviated as CG or typically in the context of film as computer generated imagery CGI The non artistic aspects of computer graphics are the subject of computer science research 1 A Blender 2 45 screenshot displaying the 3D test model SuzanneSome topics in computer graphics include user interface design sprite graphics rendering ray tracing geometry processing computer animation vector graphics 3D modeling shaders GPU design implicit surfaces visualization scientific computing image processing computational photography scientific visualization computational geometry and computer vision among others The overall methodology depends heavily on the underlying sciences of geometry optics physics and perception Simulated flight over Trenta valley in the Julian AlpsComputer graphics is responsible for displaying art and image data effectively and meaningfully to the consumer It is also used for processing image data received from the physical world such as photo and video content Computer graphics development has had a significant impact on many types of media and has revolutionized animation movies advertising and video games in general Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 1950s 2 2 1960s 2 3 1970s 2 4 1980s 2 5 1990s 2 6 2000s 2 7 2010s 3 Image types 3 1 Two dimensional 3 1 1 Pixel art 3 1 2 Sprite graphics 3 1 3 Vector graphics 3 1 4 Generative machine learning models 3 2 Three dimensional 3 3 Computer animation 4 Concepts and principles 4 1 Pixel 4 2 Primitives 4 3 Rendering 4 4 Volume rendering 4 5 3D modeling 5 Pioneers in computer graphics 5 1 Other pioneers 5 2 Organizations 6 Study of computer graphics 7 Applications 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksOverview EditThe term computer graphics has been used in a broad sense to describe almost everything on computers that is not text or sound 2 Typically the term computer graphics refers to several different things the representation and manipulation of image data by a computer the various technologies used to create and manipulate images methods for digitally synthesizing and manipulating visual content see study of computer graphicsToday computer graphics is widespread Such imagery is found in and on television newspapers weather reports and in a variety of medical investigations and surgical procedures A well constructed graph can present complex statistics in a form that is easier to understand and interpret In the media such graphs are used to illustrate papers reports theses and other presentation material 3 Many tools have been developed to visualize data Computer generated imagery can be categorized into several different types two dimensional 2D three dimensional 3D and animated graphics As technology has improved 3D computer graphics have become more common but 2D computer graphics are still widely used Computer graphics has emerged as a sub field of computer science which studies methods for digitally synthesizing and manipulating visual content Over the past decade other specialized fields have been developed like information visualization and scientific visualization more concerned with the visualization of three dimensional phenomena architectural meteorological medical biological etc where the emphasis is on realistic renderings of volumes surfaces illumination sources and so forth perhaps with a dynamic time component 4 History EditSee also History of computer animation The precursor sciences to the development of modern computer graphics were the advances in electrical engineering electronics and television that took place during the first half of the twentieth century Screens could display art since the Lumiere brothers use of mattes to create special effects for the earliest films dating from 1895 but such displays were limited and not interactive The first cathode ray tube the Braun tube was invented in 1897 it in turn would permit the oscilloscope and the military control panel the more direct precursors of the field as they provided the first two dimensional electronic displays that responded to programmatic or user input Nevertheless computer graphics remained relatively unknown as a discipline until the 1950s and the post World War II period during which time the discipline emerged from a combination of both pure university and laboratory academic research into more advanced computers and the United States military s further development of technologies like radar advanced aviation and rocketry developed during the war New kinds of displays were needed to process the wealth of information resulting from such projects leading to the development of computer graphics as a discipline 1950s Edit SAGE Sector Control RoomEarly projects like the Whirlwind and SAGE Projects introduced the CRT as a viable display and interaction interface and introduced the light pen as an input device Douglas T Ross of the Whirlwind SAGE system performed a personal experiment in which he wrote a small program that captured the movement of his finger and displayed its vector his traced name on a display scope One of the first interactive video games to feature recognizable interactive graphics Tennis for Two was created for an oscilloscope by William Higinbotham to entertain visitors in 1958 at Brookhaven National Laboratory and simulated a tennis match In 1959 Douglas T Ross innovated again while working at MIT on transforming mathematic statements into computer generated 3D machine tool vectors by taking the opportunity to create a display scope image of a Disney cartoon character 5 Electronics pioneer Hewlett Packard went public in 1957 after incorporating the decade prior and established strong ties with Stanford University through its founders who were alumni This began the decades long transformation of the southern San Francisco Bay Area into the world s leading computer technology hub now known as Silicon Valley The field of computer graphics developed with the emergence of computer graphics hardware Further advances in computing led to greater advancements in interactive computer graphics In 1959 the TX 2 computer was developed at MIT s Lincoln Laboratory The TX 2 integrated a number of new man machine interfaces A light pen could be used to draw sketches on the computer using Ivan Sutherland s revolutionary Sketchpad software 6 Using a light pen Sketchpad allowed one to draw simple shapes on the computer screen save them and even recall them later The light pen itself had a small photoelectric cell in its tip This cell emitted an electronic pulse whenever it was placed in front of a computer screen and the screen s electron gun fired directly at it By simply timing the electronic pulse with the current location of the electron gun it was easy to pinpoint exactly where the pen was on the screen at any given moment Once that was determined the computer could then draw a cursor at that location Sutherland seemed to find the perfect solution for many of the graphics problems he faced Even today many standards of computer graphics interfaces got their start with this early Sketchpad program One example of this is in drawing constraints If one wants to draw a square for example they do not have to worry about drawing four lines perfectly to form the edges of the box One can simply specify that they want to draw a box and then specify the location and size of the box The software will then construct a perfect box with the right dimensions and at the right location Another example is that Sutherland s software modeled objects not just a picture of objects In other words with a model of a car one could change the size of the tires without affecting the rest of the car It could stretch the body of car without deforming the tires 1960s Edit Spacewar running on the Computer History Museum s PDP 1The phrase computer graphics has been credited to William Fetter a graphic designer for Boeing in 1960 Fetter in turn attributed it to Verne Hudson also at Boeing 6 7 In 1961 another student at MIT Steve Russell created another important title in the history of video games Spacewar Written for the DEC PDP 1 Spacewar was an instant success and copies started flowing to other PDP 1 owners and eventually DEC got a copy citation needed The engineers at DEC used it as a diagnostic program on every new PDP 1 before shipping it The sales force picked up on this quickly enough and when installing new units would run the world s first video game for their new customers Higginbotham s Tennis For Two had beaten Spacewar by almost three years but it was almost unknown outside of a research or academic setting At around the same time 1961 1962 in the University of Cambridge Elizabeth Waldram wrote code to display radio astronomy maps on a cathode ray tube 8 E E Zajac a scientist at Bell Telephone Laboratory BTL created a film called Simulation of a two giro gravity attitude control system in 1963 9 In this computer generated film Zajac showed how the attitude of a satellite could be altered as it orbits the Earth He created the animation on an IBM 7090 mainframe computer Also at BTL Ken Knowlton Frank Sinden Ruth A Weiss and Michael Noll started working in the computer graphics field Sinden created a film called Force Mass and Motion illustrating Newton s laws of motion in operation Around the same time other scientists were creating computer graphics to illustrate their research At Lawrence Radiation Laboratory Nelson Max created the films Flow of a Viscous Fluid and Propagation of Shock Waves in a Solid Form Boeing Aircraft created a film called Vibration of an Aircraft Also sometime in the early 1960s automobiles would also provide a boost through the early work of Pierre Bezier at Renault who used Paul de Casteljau s curves now called Bezier curves after Bezier s work in the field to develop 3d modeling techniques for Renault car bodies These curves would form the foundation for much curve modeling work in the field as curves unlike polygons are mathematically complex entities to draw and model well Pong arcade versionIt was not long before major corporations started taking an interest in computer graphics TRW Lockheed Georgia General Electric and Sperry Rand are among the many companies that were getting started in computer graphics by the mid 1960s IBM was quick to respond to this interest by releasing the IBM 2250 graphics terminal the first commercially available graphics computer Ralph Baer a supervising engineer at Sanders Associates came up with a home video game in 1966 that was later licensed to Magnavox and called the Odyssey While very simplistic and requiring fairly inexpensive electronic parts it allowed the player to move points of light around on a screen It was the first consumer computer graphics product David C Evans was director of engineering at Bendix Corporation s computer division from 1953 to 1962 after which he worked for the next five years as a visiting professor at Berkeley There he continued his interest in computers and how they interfaced with people In 1966 the University of Utah recruited Evans to form a computer science program and computer graphics quickly became his primary interest This new department would become the world s primary research center for computer graphics through the 1970s Also in 1966 Ivan Sutherland continued to innovate at MIT when he invented the first computer controlled head mounted display HMD It displayed two separate wireframe images one for each eye This allowed the viewer to see the computer scene in stereoscopic 3D The heavy hardware required for supporting the display and tracker was called the Sword of Damocles because of the potential danger if it were to fall upon the wearer After receiving his Ph D from MIT Sutherland became Director of Information Processing at ARPA Advanced Research Projects Agency and later became a professor at Harvard In 1967 Sutherland was recruited by Evans to join the computer science program at the University of Utah a development which would turn that department into one of the most important research centers in graphics for nearly a decade thereafter eventually producing some of the most important pioneers in the field There Sutherland perfected his HMD twenty years later NASA would re discover his techniques in their virtual reality research At Utah Sutherland and Evans were highly sought after consultants by large companies but they were frustrated at the lack of graphics hardware available at the time so they started formulating a plan to start their own company In 1968 Dave Evans and Ivan Sutherland founded the first computer graphics hardware company Evans amp Sutherland While Sutherland originally wanted the company to be located in Cambridge Massachusetts Salt Lake City was instead chosen due to its proximity to the professors research group at the University of Utah Also in 1968 Arthur Appel described the first ray casting algorithm the first of a class of ray tracing based rendering algorithms that have since become fundamental in achieving photorealism in graphics by modeling the paths that rays of light take from a light source to surfaces in a scene and into the camera In 1969 the ACM initiated A Special Interest Group on Graphics SIGGRAPH which organizes conferences graphics standards and publications within the field of computer graphics By 1973 the first annual SIGGRAPH conference was held which has become one of the focuses of the organization SIGGRAPH has grown in size and importance as the field of computer graphics has expanded over time 1970s Edit The Utah teapot by Martin Newell and its static renders became emblematic of CGI development during the 1970s Subsequently a number of breakthroughs in the field particularly important early breakthroughs in the transformation of graphics from utilitarian to realistic occurred at the University of Utah in the 1970s which had hired Ivan Sutherland He was paired with David C Evans to teach an advanced computer graphics class which contributed a great deal of founding research to the field and taught several students who would grow to found several of the industry s most important companies namely Pixar Silicon Graphics and Adobe Systems Tom Stockham led the image processing group at UU which worked closely with the computer graphics lab One of these students was Edwin Catmull Catmull had just come from The Boeing Company and had been working on his degree in physics Growing up on Disney Catmull loved animation yet quickly discovered that he did not have the talent for drawing Now Catmull along with many others saw computers as the natural progression of animation and they wanted to be part of the revolution The first computer animation that Catmull saw was his own He created an animation of his hand opening and closing He also pioneered texture mapping to paint textures on three dimensional models in 1974 now considered one of the fundamental techniques in 3D modeling It became one of his goals to produce a feature length motion picture using computer graphics a goal he would achieve two decades later after his founding role in Pixar In the same class Fred Parke created an animation of his wife s face The two animations were included in the 1976 feature film Futureworld As the UU computer graphics laboratory was attracting people from all over John Warnock was another of those early pioneers he later founded Adobe Systems and create a revolution in the publishing world with his PostScript page description language and Adobe would go on later to create the industry standard photo editing software in Adobe Photoshop and a prominent movie industry special effects program in Adobe After Effects James Clark was also there he later founded Silicon Graphics a maker of advanced rendering systems that would dominate the field of high end graphics until the early 1990s A major advance in 3D computer graphics was created at UU by these early pioneers hidden surface determination In order to draw a representation of a 3D object on the screen the computer must determine which surfaces are behind the object from the viewer s perspective and thus should be hidden when the computer creates or renders the image The 3D Core Graphics System or Core was the first graphical standard to be developed A group of 25 experts of the ACM Special Interest Group SIGGRAPH developed this conceptual framework The specifications were published in 1977 and it became a foundation for many future developments in the field Also in the 1970s Henri Gouraud Jim Blinn and Bui Tuong Phong contributed to the foundations of shading in CGI via the development of the Gouraud shading and Blinn Phong shading models allowing graphics to move beyond a flat look to a look more accurately portraying depth Jim Blinn also innovated further in 1978 by introducing bump mapping a technique for simulating uneven surfaces and the predecessor to many more advanced kinds of mapping used today The modern videogame arcade as is known today was birthed in the 1970s with the first arcade games using real time 2D sprite graphics Pong in 1972 was one of the first hit arcade cabinet games Speed Race in 1974 featured sprites moving along a vertically scrolling road Gun Fight in 1975 featured human looking animated characters while Space Invaders in 1978 featured a large number of animated figures on screen both used a specialized barrel shifter circuit made from discrete chips to help their Intel 8080 microprocessor animate their framebuffer graphics 1980s Edit Donkey Kong was one of the video games that helped to popularize computer graphics to a mass audience in the 1980s The 1980s began to see the modernization and commercialization of computer graphics As the home computer proliferated a subject which had previously been an academics only discipline was adopted by a much larger audience and the number of computer graphics developers increased significantly In the early 1980s metal oxide semiconductor MOS very large scale integration VLSI technology led to the availability of 16 bit central processing unit CPU microprocessors and the first graphics processing unit GPU chips which began to revolutionize computer graphics enabling high resolution graphics for computer graphics terminals as well as personal computer PC systems NEC s µPD7220 was the first GPU fabricated on a fully integrated NMOS VLSI chip It supported up to 1024x1024 resolution and laid the foundations for the emerging PC graphics market It was used in a number of graphics cards and was licensed for clones such as the Intel 82720 the first of Intel s graphics processing units 10 MOS memory also became cheaper in the early 1980s enabling the development of affordable framebuffer memory 11 notably video RAM VRAM introduced by Texas Instruments TI in the mid 1980s 12 In 1984 Hitachi released the ARTC HD63484 the first complementary MOS CMOS GPU It was capable of displaying high resolution in color mode and up to 4K resolution in monochrome mode and it was used in a number of graphics cards and terminals during the late 1980s 13 In 1986 TI introduced the TMS34010 the first fully programmable MOS graphics processor 12 Computer graphics terminals during this decade became increasingly intelligent semi standalone and standalone workstations Graphics and application processing were increasingly migrated to the intelligence in the workstation rather than continuing to rely on central mainframe and mini computers Typical of the early move to high resolution computer graphics intelligent workstations for the computer aided engineering market were the Orca 1000 2000 and 3000 workstations developed by Orcatech of Ottawa a spin off from Bell Northern Research and led by David Pearson an early workstation pioneer The Orca 3000 was based on the 16 bit Motorola 68000 microprocessor and AMD bit slice processors and had Unix as its operating system It was targeted squarely at the sophisticated end of the design engineering sector Artists and graphic designers began to see the personal computer particularly the Amiga and Macintosh as a serious design tool one that could save time and draw more accurately than other methods The Macintosh remains a highly popular tool for computer graphics among graphic design studios and businesses Modern computers dating from the 1980s often use graphical user interfaces GUI to present data and information with symbols icons and pictures rather than text Graphics are one of the five key elements of multimedia technology In the field of realistic rendering Japan s Osaka University developed the LINKS 1 Computer Graphics System a supercomputer that used up to 257 Zilog Z8001 microprocessors in 1982 for the purpose of rendering realistic 3D computer graphics According to the Information Processing Society of Japan The core of 3D image rendering is calculating the luminance of each pixel making up a rendered surface from the given viewpoint light source and object position The LINKS 1 system was developed to realize an image rendering methodology in which each pixel could be parallel processed independently using ray tracing By developing a new software methodology specifically for high speed image rendering LINKS 1 was able to rapidly render highly realistic images 14 The LINKS 1 was the world s most powerful computer as of 1984 15 Also in the field of realistic rendering the general rendering equation of David Immel and James Kajiya was developed in 1986 an important step towards implementing global illumination which is necessary to pursue photorealism in computer graphics The continuing popularity of Star Wars and other science fiction franchises were relevant in cinematic CGI at this time as Lucasfilm and Industrial Light amp Magic became known as the go to house by many other studios for topnotch computer graphics in film Important advances in chroma keying bluescreening etc were made for the later films of the original trilogy Two other pieces of video would also outlast the era as historically relevant Dire Straits iconic near fully CGI video for their song Money for Nothing in 1985 which popularized CGI among music fans of that era and a scene from Young Sherlock Holmes the same year featuring the first fully CGI character in a feature movie an animated stained glass knight In 1988 the first shaders small programs designed specifically to do shading as a separate algorithm were developed by Pixar which had already spun off from Industrial Light amp Magic as a separate entity though the public would not see the results of such technological progress until the next decade In the late 1980s Silicon Graphics SGI computers were used to create some of the first fully computer generated short films at Pixar and Silicon Graphics machines were considered a high water mark for the field during the decade The 1980s is also called the golden era of videogames millions selling systems from Atari Nintendo and Sega among other companies exposed computer graphics for the first time to a new young and impressionable audience as did MS DOS based personal computers Apple IIs Macs and Amigas all of which also allowed users to program their own games if skilled enough For the arcades advances were made in commercial real time 3D graphics In 1988 the first dedicated real time 3D graphics boards were introduced for arcades with the Namco System 21 16 and Taito Air System 17 On the professional side Evans amp Sutherland and SGI developed 3D raster graphics hardware that directly influenced the later single chip graphics processing unit GPU a technology where a separate and very powerful chip is used in parallel processing with a CPU to optimize graphics The decade also saw computer graphics applied to many additional professional markets including location based entertainment and education with the E amp S Digistar vehicle design vehicle simulation and chemistry 1990s Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Quarxs series poster Maurice Benayoun Francois Schuiten 1992The 1990s overwhelming note was the emergence of 3D modeling on a mass scale and an impressive rise in the quality of CGI generally Home computers became able to take on rendering tasks that previously had been limited to workstations costing thousands of dollars as 3D modelers became available for home systems the popularity of Silicon Graphics workstations declined and powerful Microsoft Windows and Apple Macintosh machines running Autodesk products like 3D Studio or other home rendering software ascended in importance By the end of the decade the GPU would begin its rise to the prominence it still enjoys today The field began to see the first rendered graphics that could truly pass as photorealistic to the untrained eye though they could not yet do so with a trained CGI artist and 3D graphics became far more popular in gaming multimedia and animation At the end of the 1980s and the beginning of the nineties were created in France the very first computer graphics TV series La Vie des betes by studio Mac Guff Ligne 1988 Les Fables Geometriques 1989 1991 by studio Fantome and Quarxs the first HDTV computer graphics series by Maurice Benayoun and Francois Schuiten studio Z A production 1990 1993 In film Pixar began its serious commercial rise in this era under Edwin Catmull with its first major film release in 1995 Toy Story a critical and commercial success of nine figure magnitude The studio to invent the programmable shader would go on to have many animated hits and its work on prerendered video animation is still considered an industry leader and research trail breaker In video games in 1992 Virtua Racing running on the Sega Model 1 arcade system board laid the foundations for fully 3D racing games and popularized real time 3D polygonal graphics among a wider audience in the video game industry 18 The Sega Model 2 in 1993 and Sega Model 3 in 1996 subsequently pushed the boundaries of commercial real time 3D graphics Back on the PC Wolfenstein 3D Doom and Quake three of the first massively popular 3D first person shooter games were released by id Software to critical and popular acclaim during this decade using a rendering engine innovated vague primarily by John Carmack The Sony PlayStation Sega Saturn and Nintendo 64 among other consoles sold in the millions and popularized 3D graphics for home gamers Certain late 1990s first generation 3D titles became seen as influential in popularizing 3D graphics among console users such as platform games Super Mario 64 and The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time and early 3D fighting games like Virtua Fighter Battle Arena Toshinden and Tekken Technology and algorithms for rendering continued to improve greatly In 1996 Krishnamurty and Levoy invented normal mapping an improvement on Jim Blinn s bump mapping 1999 saw Nvidia release the seminal GeForce 256 the first home video card billed as a graphics processing unit or GPU which in its own words contained integrated transform lighting triangle setup clipping and rendering engines By the end of the decade computers adopted common frameworks for graphics processing such as DirectX and OpenGL Since then computer graphics have only become more detailed and realistic due to more powerful graphics hardware and 3D modeling software AMD also became a leading developer of graphics boards in this decade creating a duopoly in the field which exists this day 2000s Edit A screenshot from the videogame Killing Floor built in Unreal Engine 2 Personal computers and console video games took a great graphical leap forward in the 2000s becoming able to display graphics in real time computing that had previously only been possible pre rendered and or on business level hardware CGI became ubiquitous in earnest during this era Video games and CGI cinema had spread the reach of computer graphics to the mainstream by the late 1990s and continued to do so at an accelerated pace in the 2000s CGI was also adopted en masse for television advertisements widely in the late 1990s and 2000s and so became familiar to a massive audience The continued rise and increasing sophistication of the graphics processing unit were crucial to this decade and 3D rendering capabilities became a standard feature as 3D graphics GPUs became considered a necessity for desktop computer makers to offer The Nvidia GeForce line of graphics cards dominated the market in the early decade with occasional significant competing presence from ATI 19 As the decade progressed even low end machines usually contained a 3D capable GPU of some kind as Nvidia and AMD both introduced low priced chipsets and continued to dominate the market Shaders which had been introduced in the 1980s to perform specialized processing on the GPU would by the end of the decade become supported on most consumer hardware speeding up graphics considerably and allowing for greatly improved texture and shading in computer graphics via the widespread adoption of normal mapping bump mapping and a variety of other techniques allowing the simulation of a great amount of detail Computer graphics used in films and video games gradually began to be realistic to the point of entering the uncanny valley CGI movies proliferated with traditional animated cartoon films like Ice Age and Madagascar as well as numerous Pixar offerings like Finding Nemo dominating the box office in this field The Final Fantasy The Spirits Within released in 2001 was the first fully computer generated feature film to use photorealistic CGI characters and be fully made with motion capture 20 The film was not a box office success however 21 Some commentators have suggested this may be partly because the lead CGI characters had facial features which fell into the uncanny valley note 1 Other animated films like The Polar Express drew attention at this time as well Star Wars also resurfaced with its prequel trilogy and the effects continued to set a bar for CGI in film In videogames the Sony PlayStation 2 and 3 the Microsoft Xbox line of consoles and offerings from Nintendo such as the GameCube maintained a large following as did the Windows PC Marquee CGI heavy titles like the series of Grand Theft Auto Assassin s Creed Final Fantasy BioShock Kingdom Hearts Mirror s Edge and dozens of others continued to approach photorealism grow the video game industry and impress until that industry s revenues became comparable to those of movies Microsoft made a decision to expose DirectX more easily to the independent developer world with the XNA program but it was not a success DirectX itself remained a commercial success however OpenGL continued to mature as well and it and DirectX improved greatly the second generation shader languages HLSL and GLSL began to be popular in this decade In scientific computing the GPGPU technique to pass large amounts of data bidirectionally between a GPU and CPU was invented speeding up analysis on many kinds of bioinformatics and molecular biology experiments The technique has also been used for Bitcoin mining and has applications in computer vision 2010s Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2014 A diamond plate texture rendered close up using physically based rendering principles increasingly an active area of research for computer graphics in the 2010sIn the 2010s CGI has been nearly ubiquitous in video pre rendered graphics are nearly scientifically photorealistic and real time graphics on a suitably high end system may simulate photorealism to the untrained eye Texture mapping has matured into a multistage process with many layers generally it is not uncommon to implement texture mapping bump mapping or isosurfaces or normal mapping lighting maps including specular highlights and reflection techniques and shadow volumes into one rendering engine using shaders which are maturing considerably Shaders are now very nearly a necessity for advanced work in the field providing considerable complexity in manipulating pixels vertices and textures on a per element basis and countless possible effects Their shader languages HLSL and GLSL are active fields of research and development Physically based rendering or PBR which implements many maps and performs advanced calculation to simulate real optic light flow is an active research area as well along with advanced areas like ambient occlusion subsurface scattering Rayleigh scattering photon mapping and many others Experiments into the processing power required to provide graphics in real time at ultra high resolution modes like 4K Ultra HD are beginning though beyond reach of all but the highest end hardware In cinema most animated movies are CGI now a great many animated CGI films are made per year but few if any attempt photorealism due to continuing fears of the uncanny valley Most are 3D cartoons In videogames the Microsoft Xbox One Sony PlayStation 4 and Nintendo Switch dominated the home space and were all capable of advanced 3D graphics the Windows PC was still one of the most active gaming platforms as well Image types EditTwo dimensional Edit Main article 2D computer graphics See also Video display controller Raster graphic sprites left and masks right 2D computer graphics are the computer based generation of digital images mostly from models such as digital image and by techniques specific to them 2D computer graphics are mainly used in applications that were originally developed upon traditional printing and drawing technologies such as typography In those applications the two dimensional image is not just a representation of a real world object but an independent artifact with added semantic value two dimensional models are therefore preferred because they give more direct control of the image than 3D computer graphics whose approach is more akin to photography than to typography Pixel art Edit See also Pixel art A large form of digital art pixel art is created through the use of raster graphics software where images are edited on the pixel level Graphics in most old or relatively limited computer and video games graphing calculator games and many mobile phone games are mostly pixel art Sprite graphics Edit See also Sprite computer graphics A sprite is a two dimensional image or animation that is integrated into a larger scene Initially including just graphical objects handled separately from the memory bitmap of a video display this now includes various manners of graphical overlays Originally sprites were a method of integrating unrelated bitmaps so that they appeared to be part of the normal bitmap on a screen such as creating an animated character that can be moved on a screen without altering the data defining the overall screen Such sprites can be created by either electronic circuitry or software In circuitry a hardware sprite is a hardware construct that employs custom DMA channels to integrate visual elements with the main screen in that it super imposes two discrete video sources Software can simulate this through specialized rendering methods Vector graphics Edit Example showing effect of vector graphics versus raster bitmap graphicsSee also Vector graphics Vector graphics formats are complementary to raster graphics Raster graphics is the representation of images as an array of pixels and is typically used for the representation of photographic images 22 Vector graphics consists in encoding information about shapes and colors that comprise the image which can allow for more flexibility in rendering There are instances when working with vector tools and formats is best practice and instances when working with raster tools and formats is best practice There are times when both formats come together An understanding of the advantages and limitations of each technology and the relationship between them is most likely to result in efficient and effective use of tools Generative machine learning models Edit Stable Diffusion output for the prompt an astronaut riding a horse by Hiroshige 2022See also Text to image model Since the mid 2010s as a result of advances in deep neural networks models have been created which take as input a natural language description and produces as output an image matching that description Text to image models generally combine a language model which transforms the input text into a latent representation and a generative image model which produces an image conditioned on that representation The most effective models have generally been trained on massive amounts of image and text data scraped from the web By 2022 the best of these models for example Dall E 2 and Stable Diffusion are able to create images in a range of styles ranging from imitations of living artists to near photorealistic in a matter of seconds given powerful enough hardware 23 Three dimensional Edit Main article 3D computer graphics See also Graphics processing unit 3D graphics compared to 2D graphics are graphics that use a three dimensional representation of geometric data For the purpose of performance this is stored in the computer This includes images that may be for later display or for real time viewing Despite these differences 3D computer graphics rely on similar algorithms as 2D computer graphics do in the frame and raster graphics like in 2D in the final rendered display In computer graphics software the distinction between 2D and 3D is occasionally blurred 2D applications may use 3D techniques to achieve effects such as lighting and primarily 3D may use 2D rendering techniques 3D computer graphics are the same as 3D models The model is contained within the graphical data file apart from the rendering However there are differences that include the 3D model is the representation of any 3D object Until visually displayed a model is not graphic Due to printing 3D models are not only confined to virtual space 3D rendering is how a model can be displayed Also can be used in non graphical computer simulations and calculations Computer animation Edit See also Computer animation Example of Computer animation produced using Motion capture Fractal landscape an example of computer generated imageryComputer animation is the art of creating moving images via the use of computers It is a subfield of computer graphics and animation Increasingly it is created by means of 3D computer graphics though 2D computer graphics are still widely used for stylistic low bandwidth and faster real time rendering needs Sometimes the target of the animation is the computer itself but sometimes the target is another medium such as film It is also referred to as CGI Computer generated imagery or computer generated imaging especially when used in films Virtual entities may contain and be controlled by assorted attributes such as transform values location orientation and scale stored in an object s transformation matrix Animation is the change of an attribute over time Multiple methods of achieving animation exist the rudimentary form is based on the creation and editing of keyframes each storing a value at a given time per attribute to be animated The 2D 3D graphics software will change with each keyframe creating an editable curve of a value mapped over time in which results in animation Other methods of animation include procedural and expression based techniques the former consolidates related elements of animated entities into sets of attributes useful for creating particle effects and crowd simulations the latter allows an evaluated result returned from a user defined logical expression coupled with mathematics to automate animation in a predictable way convenient for controlling bone behavior beyond what a hierarchy offers in skeletal system set up To create the illusion of movement an image is displayed on the computer screen then quickly replaced by a new image that is similar to the previous image but shifted slightly This technique is identical to the illusion of movement in television and motion pictures Concepts and principles EditImages are typically created by devices such as cameras mirrors lenses telescopes microscopes etc Digital images include both vector images and raster images but raster images are more commonly used Pixel Edit In the enlarged portion of the image individual pixels are rendered as squares and can be easily seen In digital imaging a pixel or picture element 24 is a single point in a raster image Pixels are placed on a regular 2 dimensional grid and are often represented using dots or squares Each pixel is a sample of an original image where more samples typically provide a more accurate representation of the original The intensity of each pixel is variable in color systems each pixel has typically three components such as red green and blue Graphics are visual presentations on a surface such as a computer screen Examples are photographs drawing graphics designs maps engineering drawings or other images Graphics often combine text and illustration Graphic design may consist of the deliberate selection creation or arrangement of typography alone as in a brochure flier poster web site or book without any other element Clarity or effective communication may be the objective association with other cultural elements may be sought or merely the creation of a distinctive style Primitives Edit Primitives are basic units which a graphics system may combine to create more complex images or models Examples would be sprites and character maps in 2D video games geometric primitives in CAD or polygons or triangles in 3D rendering Primitives may be supported in hardware for efficient rendering or the building blocks provided by a graphics application Rendering Edit Rendering is the generation of a 2D image from a 3D model by means of computer programs A scene file contains objects in a strictly defined language or data structure it would contain geometry viewpoint texture lighting and shading information as a description of the virtual scene 25 The data contained in the scene file is then passed to a rendering program to be processed and output to a digital image or raster graphics image file The rendering program is usually built into the computer graphics software though others are available as plug ins or entirely separate programs The term rendering may be by analogy with an artist s rendering of a scene Although the technical details of rendering methods vary the general challenges to overcome in producing a 2D image from a 3D representation stored in a scene file are outlined as the graphics pipeline along a rendering device such as a GPU A GPU is a device able to assist the CPU in calculations If a scene is to look relatively realistic and predictable under virtual lighting the rendering software should solve the rendering equation The rendering equation does not account for all lighting phenomena but is a general lighting model for computer generated imagery Rendering is also used to describe the process of calculating effects in a video editing file to produce final video output 3D projection 3D projection is a method of mapping three dimensional points to a two dimensional plane As most current methods for displaying graphical data are based on planar two dimensional media the use of this type of projection is widespread This method is used in most real time 3D applications and typically uses rasterization to produce the final image Ray tracing Ray tracing is a technique from the family of image order algorithms for generating an image by tracing the path of light through pixels in an image plane The technique is capable of producing a high degree of photorealism usually higher than that of typical scanline rendering methods but at a greater computational cost Shading Example of shadingShading refers to depicting depth in 3D models or illustrations by varying levels of darkness It is a process used in drawing for depicting levels of darkness on paper by applying media more densely or with a darker shade for darker areas and less densely or with a lighter shade for lighter areas There are various techniques of shading including cross hatching where perpendicular lines of varying closeness are drawn in a grid pattern to shade an area The closer the lines are together the darker the area appears Likewise the farther apart the lines are the lighter the area appears The term has been recently generalized to mean that shaders are applied Texture mapping Texture mapping is a method for adding detail surface texture or colour to a computer generated graphic or 3D model Its application to 3D graphics was pioneered by Dr Edwin Catmull in 1974 A texture map is applied mapped to the surface of a shape or polygon This process is akin to applying patterned paper to a plain white box Multitexturing is the use of more than one texture at a time on a polygon 26 Procedural textures created from adjusting parameters of an underlying algorithm that produces an output texture and bitmap textures created in an image editing application or imported from a digital camera are generally speaking common methods of implementing texture definition on 3D models in computer graphics software while intended placement of textures onto a model s surface often requires a technique known as UV mapping arbitrary manual layout of texture coordinates for polygon surfaces while non uniform rational B spline NURB surfaces have their own intrinsic parameterization used as texture coordinates Texture mapping as a discipline also encompasses techniques for creating normal maps and bump maps that correspond to a texture to simulate height and specular maps to help simulate shine and light reflections as well as environment mapping to simulate mirror like reflectivity also called gloss Anti aliasing Rendering resolution independent entities such as 3D models for viewing on a raster pixel based device such as a liquid crystal display or CRT television inevitably causes aliasing artifacts mostly along geometric edges and the boundaries of texture details these artifacts are informally called jaggies Anti aliasing methods rectify such problems resulting in imagery more pleasing to the viewer but can be somewhat computationally expensive Various anti aliasing algorithms such as supersampling are able to be employed then customized for the most efficient rendering performance versus quality of the resultant imagery a graphics artist should consider this trade off if anti aliasing methods are to be used A pre anti aliased bitmap texture being displayed on a screen or screen location at a resolution different from the resolution of the texture itself such as a textured model in the distance from the virtual camera will exhibit aliasing artifacts while any procedurally defined texture will always show aliasing artifacts as they are resolution independent techniques such as mipmapping and texture filtering help to solve texture related aliasing problems Volume rendering Edit Volume rendered CT scan of a forearm with different colour schemes for muscle fat bone and bloodVolume rendering is a technique used to display a 2D projection of a 3D discretely sampled data set A typical 3D data set is a group of 2D slice images acquired by a CT or MRI scanner Usually these are acquired in a regular pattern e g one slice every millimeter and usually have a regular number of image pixels in a regular pattern This is an example of a regular volumetric grid with each volume element or voxel represented by a single value that is obtained by sampling the immediate area surrounding the voxel 3D modeling Edit Main article 3D modeling 3D modeling is the process of developing a mathematical wireframe representation of any three dimensional object called a 3D model via specialized software Models may be created automatically or manually the manual modeling process of preparing geometric data for 3D computer graphics is similar to plastic arts such as sculpting 3D models may be created using multiple approaches use of NURBs to generate accurate and smooth surface patches polygonal mesh modeling manipulation of faceted geometry or polygonal mesh subdivision advanced tessellation of polygons resulting in smooth surfaces similar to NURB models A 3D model can be displayed as a two dimensional image through a process called 3D rendering used in a computer simulation of physical phenomena or animated directly for other purposes The model can also be physically created using 3D Printing devices Pioneers in computer graphics EditCharles Csuri Charles Csuri is a pioneer in computer animation and digital fine art and created the first computer art in 1964 Csuri was recognized by Smithsonian as the father of digital art and computer animation and as a pioneer of computer animation by the Museum of Modern Art MoMA and Association for Computing Machinery SIGGRAPH Donald P Greenberg Donald P Greenberg is a leading innovator in computer graphics Greenberg has authored hundreds of articles and served as a teacher and mentor to many prominent computer graphic artists animators and researchers such as Robert L Cook Marc Levoy Brian A Barsky and Wayne Lytle Many of his former students have won Academy Awards for technical achievements and several have won the SIGGRAPH Achievement Award Greenberg was the founding director of the NSF Center for Computer Graphics and Scientific Visualization A Michael Noll Noll was one of the first researchers to use a digital computer to create artistic patterns and to formalize the use of random processes in the creation of visual arts He began creating digital art in 1962 making him one of the earliest digital artists In 1965 Noll along with Frieder Nake and Georg Nees were the first to publicly exhibit their computer art During April 1965 the Howard Wise Gallery exhibited Noll s computer art along with random dot patterns by Bela Julesz Other pioneers Edit A modern render of the Utah teapot an iconic model in 3D computer graphics created by Martin Newell 1975Pierre Bezier Jim Blinn Jack Bresenham John Carmack Paul de Casteljau Ed Catmull Frank Crow James D Foley William Fetter Henry Fuchs Henri Gouraud Charles Loop Nadia Magnenat Thalmann Benoit Mandelbrot Martin Newell Fred Parke Bui Tuong Phong Steve Russell Daniel J Sandin Alvy Ray Smith Bob Sproull Ivan Sutherland Daniel Thalmann Andries van Dam John Warnock J Turner Whitted Lance Williams Jim KajiyaOrganizations Edit SIGGRAPH GDC Bell Telephone Laboratories United States Armed Forces particularly the Whirlwind computer and SAGE Project Boeing Eurographics IBM Renault The computer science department of the University of Utah Lucasfilm and Industrial Light amp Magic Autodesk Adobe Systems Pixar Silicon Graphics Khronos Group amp OpenGL The DirectX division at Microsoft Nvidia AMDStudy of computer graphics EditMain article Computer graphics computer science The study of computer graphics is a sub field of computer science which studies methods for digitally synthesizing and manipulating visual content Although the term often refers to three dimensional computer graphics it also encompasses two dimensional graphics and image processing As an academic discipline computer graphics studies the manipulation of visual and geometric information using computational techniques It focuses on the mathematical and computational foundations of image generation and processing rather than purely aesthetic issues Computer graphics is often differentiated from the field of visualization although the two fields have many similarities Applications EditComputer graphics may be used in the following areas Augmented reality Computational biology Computational photography Computational physics Computer aided design Computing Design Digital art Education Extended reality Graphic design Infographics Information visualization Mixed reality Rational drug design Simulation Scientific visualization Special effects for cinema Video games Virtual reality Web3DSee also EditComputer representation of surfaces Glossary of computer graphicsNotes Edit The uncanny valley is a hypothesis in the field of robotics and 3D computer animation which holds that when human replicas look and act almost but not perfectly like actual human beings it causes a response of revulsion among human observers The concept valley refers to the dip in a graph of the comfort level of humans as a function of a robot s human likeness References Edit ACM Computing Classification System ToC Association for Computing Machinery September 21 2016 Archived from the original on Jul 28 2020 Retrieved 2020 04 28 What is Computer Graphics Cornell University Program of Computer Graphics 15 April 1998 What are computer graphics University of Leeds Archived from the original on 2015 01 06 Michael Friendly 2008 Milestones in the history of thematic cartography statistical graphics and data visualization From the Vault of MIT Jan 20 2016 MIT Science Reporter Automatically Programmed Tools 1959 YouTube a b Carlson Wayne 2003 A Critical History of Computer Graphics and Animation Archived from the original on April 5 2007 Peddie Jon 2013 The History of Visual Magic in Computers How Beautiful Images are Made in CAD 3D VR and AR Springer p 101 ISBN 978 1447149316 EDSAC 1 and after a compilation of personal reminiscences Retrieved 11 July 2019 David Salomon 1999 Computer graphics and geometric modeling p ix Peddie Jon Famous Graphics Chips NEC µPD7220 Graphics Display Controller The first graphics processor chip IEEE Computer Society Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Retrieved 1 November 2019 Goldwasser S M June 1983 Computer Architecture For Interactive Display Of Segmented Imagery Computer Architectures for Spatially Distributed Data Springer Science amp Business Media pp 75 94 81 ISBN 9783642821509 a b Peddie Jon Famous Graphics Chips TI TMS34010 and VRAM IEEE Computer Society Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Retrieved 1 November 2019 Peddie Jon GPU History Hitachi ARTC HD63484 The second graphics processor IEEE Computer Society Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Retrieved 1 November 2019 Information Processing Society of Japan LINKS 1 Computer Graphics System Computer Museum Retrieved 15 June 2015 Defanti Thomas A 1984 The Mass Impact of Videogame Technology PDF Advances in Computers 23 121 doi 10 1016 S0065 2458 08 60463 5 ISBN 9780120121236 ISSN 0065 2458 Retrieved 9 November 2022 System 16 Namco System 21 Hardware Namco Retrieved 15 June 2015 System 16 Taito Air System Hardware Taito Retrieved 15 June 2015 Virtua Racing Arcade 1992 15 Most Influential Games of All Time GameSpot 14 March 2001 Archived from the original on 2010 04 12 Retrieved 19 January 2014 The Future Of Computer Graphics Daniel Sevo 2005 retrieved 26 February 2015 Cinema A Painstaking Fantasy Chris Taylor Time 31 July 2000 retrieved 8 August 2012 Final Fantasy The Spirits Within at Box Office Mojo retrieved 12 August 2012 Greenberg Ira 2007 Processing Creative Coding and Computational Art Apress ISBN 978 1 59059 617 3 Vincent James May 24 2022 All these images were generated by Google s latest text to image AI The Verge Vox Media Retrieved May 28 2022 Graf Rudolf F 1999 Modern Dictionary of Electronics Oxford England Newnes p 569 ISBN 0 7506 4331 5 Lighting principles for 3D artists from film and art GarageFarm 2021 07 21 Retrieved 2021 07 21 Blythe David Advanced Graphics Programming Techniques Using OpenGL Siggraph 1999 see Multitexture Further reading EditL Ammeraal and K Zhang 2007 Computer Graphics for Java Programmers Second Edition John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 470 03160 5 David Rogers 1998 Procedural Elements for Computer Graphics McGraw Hill James D Foley Andries Van Dam Steven K Feiner and John F Hughes 1995 Computer Graphics Principles and Practice Addison Wesley Donald Hearn and M Pauline Baker 1994 Computer Graphics Prentice Hall Francis S Hill 2001 Computer Graphics Prentice Hall John Lewell 1985 Computer Graphics A Survey of Current Techniques and Applications Van Nostrand Reinhold Jeffrey J McConnell 2006 Computer Graphics Theory Into Practice Jones amp Bartlett Publishers R D Parslow R W Prowse Richard Elliot Green 1969 Computer Graphics Techniques and Applications Peter Shirley and others 2005 Fundamentals of computer graphics A K Peters Ltd M Slater A Steed Y Chrysantho 2002 Computer graphics and virtual environments from realism to real time Addison Wesley Wolfgang Hohl 2008 Interactive environments with open source software Springer Wien New York ISBN 3 211 79169 8External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Computer graphics Look up computer graphics in Wiktionary the free dictionary A Critical History of Computer Graphics and Animation archived 5 April 2007 History of Computer Graphics series of articles archived 2 March 2007 Computer Graphics research at UC Berkeley Thomas Dreher History of Computer Art chap IV 2 Computer Animation History of Computer Graphics on RUS Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Computer graphics amp oldid 1166416160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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