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author Robert McIntyre <rlm@mit.edu>
date Sun, 12 Feb 2012 13:48:28 -0700
parents be78d7bd6920
children c39b8b29a79e
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1 #+title: Helper Functions / Motivations
2 #+author: Robert McIntyre
3 #+email: rlm@mit.edu
4 #+description: sensory utilities
5 #+keywords: simulation, jMonkeyEngine3, clojure, simulated senses
6 #+SETUPFILE: ../../aurellem/org/setup.org
7 #+INCLUDE: ../../aurellem/org/level-0.org
10 * Blender Utilities
11 In blender, any object can be assigned an arbitray number of key-value
12 pairs which are called "Custom Properties". These are accessable in
13 jMonkyeEngine when blender files are imported with the
14 =BlenderLoader=. =(meta-data)= extracts these properties.
16 #+name: blender-1
17 #+begin_src clojure
18 (defn meta-data
19 "Get the meta-data for a node created with blender."
20 [blender-node key]
21 (if-let [data (.getUserData blender-node "properties")]
22 (.findValue data key) nil))
23 #+end_src
25 Blender uses a different coordinate system than jMonkeyEngine so it
26 is useful to be able to convert between the two. These only come into
27 play when the meta-data of a node refers to a vector in the blender
28 coordinate system.
30 #+name: blender-2
31 #+begin_src clojure
32 (defn jme-to-blender
33 "Convert from JME coordinates to Blender coordinates"
34 [#^Vector3f in]
35 (Vector3f. (.getX in) (- (.getZ in)) (.getY in)))
37 (defn blender-to-jme
38 "Convert from Blender coordinates to JME coordinates"
39 [#^Vector3f in]
40 (Vector3f. (.getX in) (.getZ in) (- (.getY in))))
41 #+end_src
43 * Sense Topology
45 Human beings are three-dimensional objects, and the nerves that
46 transmit data from our various sense organs to our brain are
47 essentially one-dimensional. This leaves up to two dimensions in which
48 our sensory information may flow. For example, imagine your skin: it
49 is a two-dimensional surface around a three-dimensional object (your
50 body). It has discrete touch sensors embedded at various points, and
51 the density of these sensors corresponds to the sensitivity of that
52 region of skin. Each touch sensor connects to a nerve, all of which
53 eventually are bundled together as they travel up the spinal cord to
54 the brain. Intersect the spinal nerves with a guillotining plane and
55 you will see all of the sensory data of the skin revealed in a roughly
56 circular two-dimensional image which is the cross section of the
57 spinal cord. Points on this image that are close together in this
58 circle represent touch sensors that are /probably/ close together on
59 the skin, although there is of course some cutting and rerangement
60 that has to be done to transfer the complicated surface of the skin
61 onto a two dimensional image.
63 Most human senses consist of many discrete sensors of various
64 properties distributed along a surface at various densities. For
65 skin, it is Pacinian corpuscles, Meissner's corpuscles, Merkel's
66 disks, and Ruffini's endings, which detect pressure and vibration of
67 various intensities. For ears, it is the stereocilia distributed
68 along the basilar membrane inside the cochlea; each one is sensitive
69 to a slightly different frequency of sound. For eyes, it is rods
70 and cones distributed along the surface of the retina. In each case,
71 we can describe the sense with a surface and a distribution of sensors
72 along that surface.
74 ** UV-maps
76 Blender and jMonkeyEngine already have support for exactly this sort
77 of data structure because it is used to "skin" models for games. It is
78 called [[http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Doc:2.6/Manual/Textures/Mapping/UV][UV-mapping]]. The three-dimensional surface of a model is cut
79 and smooshed until it fits on a two-dimensional image. You paint
80 whatever you want on that image, and when the three-dimensional shape
81 is rendered in a game the smooshing and cutting us reversed and the
82 image appears on the three-dimensional object.
84 To make a sense, interpret the UV-image as describing the distribution
85 of that senses sensors. To get different types of sensors, you can
86 either use a different color for each type of sensor, or use multiple
87 UV-maps, each labeled with that sensor type. I generally use a white
88 pixel to mean the presense of a sensor and a black pixel to mean the
89 absense of a sensor, and use one UV-map for each sensor-type within a
90 given sense. The paths to the images are not stored as the actual
91 UV-map of the blender object but are instead referenced in the
92 meta-data of the node.
94 #+CAPTION: The UV-map for an enlongated icososphere. The white dots each represent a touch sensor. They are dense in the regions that describe the tip of the finger, and less dense along the dorsal side of the finger opposite the tip.
95 #+ATTR_HTML: width="300"
96 [[../images/finger-UV.png]]
98 #+CAPTION: Ventral side of the UV-mapped finger. Notice the density of touch sensors at the tip.
99 #+ATTR_HTML: width="300"
100 [[../images/finger-1.png]]
102 #+CAPTION: Side view of the UV-mapped finger.
103 #+ATTR_HTML: width="300"
104 [[../images/finger-2.png]]
106 #+CAPTION: Head on view of the finger. In both the head and side views you can see the divide where the touch-sensors transition from high density to low density.
107 #+ATTR_HTML: width="300"
108 [[../images/finger-3.png]]
110 The following code loads images and gets the locations of the white
111 pixels so that they can be used to create senses. =(load-image)= finds
112 images using jMonkeyEngine's asset-manager, so the image path is
113 expected to be relative to the =assets= directory. Thanks to Dylan
114 for the beautiful version of =(filter-pixels)=.
116 #+name: topology-1
117 #+begin_src clojure
118 (defn load-image
119 "Load an image as a BufferedImage using the asset-manager system."
120 [asset-relative-path]
121 (ImageToAwt/convert
122 (.getImage (.loadTexture (asset-manager) asset-relative-path))
123 false false 0))
125 (def white 0xFFFFFF)
127 (defn white? [rgb]
128 (= (bit-and white rgb) white))
130 (defn filter-pixels
131 "List the coordinates of all pixels matching pred, within the bounds
132 provided. If bounds are not specified then the entire image is
133 searched.
134 bounds -> [x0 y0 width height]"
135 {:author "Dylan Holmes"}
136 ([pred #^BufferedImage image]
137 (filter-pixels pred image [0 0 (.getWidth image) (.getHeight image)]))
138 ([pred #^BufferedImage image [x0 y0 width height]]
139 ((fn accumulate [x y matches]
140 (cond
141 (>= y (+ height y0)) matches
142 (>= x (+ width x0)) (recur 0 (inc y) matches)
143 (pred (.getRGB image x y))
144 (recur (inc x) y (conj matches [x y]))
145 :else (recur (inc x) y matches)))
146 x0 y0 [])))
148 (defn white-coordinates
149 "Coordinates of all the white pixels in a subset of the image."
150 ([#^BufferedImage image bounds]
151 (filter-pixels white? image bounds))
152 ([#^BufferedImage image]
153 (filter-pixels white? image)))
154 #+end_src
156 ** Topology
158 Information from the senses is transmitted to the brain via bundles of
159 axons, whether it be the optic nerve or the spinal cord. While these
160 bundles more or less perserve the overall topology of a sense's
161 two-dimensional surface, they do not perserve the percise euclidean
162 distances between every sensor. =(collapse)= is here to smoosh the
163 sensors described by a UV-map into a contigous region that still
164 perserves the topology of the original sense.
166 #+name: topology-2
167 #+begin_src clojure
168 (in-ns 'cortex.sense)
170 (defn average [coll]
171 (/ (reduce + coll) (count coll)))
173 (defn- collapse-1d
174 "One dimensional helper for collapse."
175 [center line]
176 (let [length (count line)
177 num-above (count (filter (partial < center) line))
178 num-below (- length num-above)]
179 (range (- center num-below)
180 (+ center num-above))))
182 (defn collapse
183 "Take a sequence of pairs of integers and collapse them into a
184 contigous bitmap with no \"holes\" or negative entries, as close to
185 the origin [0 0] as the shape permits. The order of the points is
186 preserved.
188 eg.
189 (collapse [[-5 5] [5 5] --> [[0 1] [1 1]
190 [-5 -5] [5 -5]]) --> [0 0] [1 0]]
192 (collapse [[-5 5] [-5 -5] --> [[0 1] [0 0]
193 [ 5 -5] [ 5 5]]) --> [1 0] [1 1]]"
194 [points]
195 (if (empty? points) []
196 (let
197 [num-points (count points)
198 center (vector
199 (int (average (map first points)))
200 (int (average (map first points))))
201 flattened
202 (reduce
203 concat
204 (map
205 (fn [column]
206 (map vector
207 (map first column)
208 (collapse-1d (second center)
209 (map second column))))
210 (partition-by first (sort-by first points))))
211 squeezed
212 (reduce
213 concat
214 (map
215 (fn [row]
216 (map vector
217 (collapse-1d (first center)
218 (map first row))
219 (map second row)))
220 (partition-by second (sort-by second flattened))))
221 relocated
222 (let [min-x (apply min (map first squeezed))
223 min-y (apply min (map second squeezed))]
224 (map (fn [[x y]]
225 [(- x min-x)
226 (- y min-y)])
227 squeezed))
228 point-correspondance
229 (zipmap (sort points) (sort relocated))
231 original-order
232 (vec (map point-correspondance points))]
233 original-order)))
234 #+end_src
235 * Viewing Sense Data
237 It's vital to /see/ the sense data to make sure that everything is
238 behaving as it should. =(view-sense)= and its helper, =(view-image)=
239 are here so that each sense can define its own way of turning
240 sense-data into pictures, while the actual rendering of said pictures
241 stays in one central place. =(points->image)= helps senses generate a
242 base image onto which they can overlay actual sense data.
244 #+name: view-senses
245 #+begin_src clojure
246 (in-ns 'cortex.sense)
248 (defn view-image
249 "Initailizes a JPanel on which you may draw a BufferedImage.
250 Returns a function that accepts a BufferedImage and draws it to the
251 JPanel. If given a directory it will save the images as png files
252 starting at 0000000.png and incrementing from there."
253 ([#^File save]
254 (let [idx (atom -1)
255 image
256 (atom
257 (BufferedImage. 1 1 BufferedImage/TYPE_4BYTE_ABGR))
258 panel
259 (proxy [JPanel] []
260 (paint
261 [graphics]
262 (proxy-super paintComponent graphics)
263 (.drawImage graphics @image 0 0 nil)))
264 frame (JFrame. "Display Image")]
265 (SwingUtilities/invokeLater
266 (fn []
267 (doto frame
268 (-> (.getContentPane) (.add panel))
269 (.pack)
270 (.setLocationRelativeTo nil)
271 (.setResizable true)
272 (.setVisible true))))
273 (fn [#^BufferedImage i]
274 (reset! image i)
275 (.setSize frame (+ 8 (.getWidth i)) (+ 28 (.getHeight i)))
276 (.repaint panel 0 0 (.getWidth i) (.getHeight i))
277 (if save
278 (ImageIO/write
279 i "png"
280 (File. save (format "%07d.png" (swap! idx inc))))))))
281 ([] (view-image nil)))
283 (defn view-sense
284 "Take a kernel that produces a BufferedImage from some sense data
285 and return a function which takes a list of sense data, uses the
286 kernel to convert to images, and displays those images, each in
287 its own JFrame."
288 [sense-display-kernel]
289 (let [windows (atom [])]
290 (fn this
291 ([data]
292 (this data nil))
293 ([data save-to]
294 (if (> (count data) (count @windows))
295 (reset!
296 windows
297 (doall
298 (map
299 (fn [idx]
300 (if save-to
301 (let [dir (File. save-to (str idx))]
302 (.mkdir dir)
303 (view-image dir))
304 (view-image))) (range (count data))))))
305 (dorun
306 (map
307 (fn [display datum]
308 (display (sense-display-kernel datum)))
309 @windows data))))))
312 (defn points->image
313 "Take a collection of points and visuliaze it as a BufferedImage."
314 [points]
315 (if (empty? points)
316 (BufferedImage. 1 1 BufferedImage/TYPE_BYTE_BINARY)
317 (let [xs (vec (map first points))
318 ys (vec (map second points))
319 x0 (apply min xs)
320 y0 (apply min ys)
321 width (- (apply max xs) x0)
322 height (- (apply max ys) y0)
323 image (BufferedImage. (inc width) (inc height)
324 BufferedImage/TYPE_INT_RGB)]
325 (dorun
326 (for [x (range (.getWidth image))
327 y (range (.getHeight image))]
328 (.setRGB image x y 0xFF0000)))
329 (dorun
330 (for [index (range (count points))]
331 (.setRGB image (- (xs index) x0) (- (ys index) y0) -1)))
332 image)))
334 (defn gray
335 "Create a gray RGB pixel with R, G, and B set to num. num must be
336 between 0 and 255."
337 [num]
338 (+ num
339 (bit-shift-left num 8)
340 (bit-shift-left num 16)))
341 #+end_src
343 * Building a Sense from Nodes
344 My method for defining senses in blender is the following:
346 Senses like vision and hearing are localized to a single point
347 and follow a particular object around. For these:
349 - Create a single top-level empty node whose name is the name of the sense
350 - Add empty nodes which each contain meta-data relevant
351 to the sense, including a UV-map describing the number/distribution
352 of sensors if applicipable.
353 - Make each empty-node the child of the top-level
354 node. =(sense-nodes)= below generates functions to find these children.
356 For touch, store the path to the UV-map which describes touch-sensors in the
357 meta-data of the object to which that map applies.
359 Each sense provides code that analyzes the Node structure of the
360 creature and creates sense-functions. They also modify the Node
361 structure if necessary.
363 Empty nodes created in blender have no appearance or physical presence
364 in jMonkeyEngine, but do appear in the scene graph. Empty nodes that
365 represent a sense which "follows" another geometry (like eyes and
366 ears) follow the closest physical object. =(closest-node)= finds this
367 closest object given the Creature and a particular empty node.
369 #+name: node-1
370 #+begin_src clojure
371 (defn sense-nodes
372 "For some senses there is a special empty blender node whose
373 children are considered markers for an instance of that sense. This
374 function generates functions to find those children, given the name
375 of the special parent node."
376 [parent-name]
377 (fn [#^Node creature]
378 (if-let [sense-node (.getChild creature parent-name)]
379 (seq (.getChildren sense-node))
380 (do (println-repl "could not find" parent-name "node") []))))
382 (defn closest-node
383 "Return the physical node in creature which is closest to the given
384 node."
385 [#^Node creature #^Node empty]
386 (loop [radius (float 0.01)]
387 (let [results (CollisionResults.)]
388 (.collideWith
389 creature
390 (BoundingBox. (.getWorldTranslation empty)
391 radius radius radius)
392 results)
393 (if-let [target (first results)]
394 (.getGeometry target)
395 (recur (float (* 2 radius)))))))
397 (defn world-to-local
398 "Convert the world coordinates into coordinates relative to the
399 object (i.e. local coordinates), taking into account the rotation
400 of object."
401 [#^Spatial object world-coordinate]
402 (.worldToLocal object world-coordinate nil))
404 (defn local-to-world
405 "Convert the local coordinates into world relative coordinates"
406 [#^Spatial object local-coordinate]
407 (.localToWorld object local-coordinate nil))
408 #+end_src
410 ** Sense Binding
412 =(bind-sense)= binds either a Camera or a Listener object to any
413 object so that they will follow that object no matter how it
414 moves. It is used to create both eyes and ears.
416 #+name: node-2
417 #+begin_src clojure
418 (defn bind-sense
419 "Bind the sense to the Spatial such that it will maintain its
420 current position relative to the Spatial no matter how the spatial
421 moves. 'sense can be either a Camera or Listener object."
422 [#^Spatial obj sense]
423 (let [sense-offset (.subtract (.getLocation sense)
424 (.getWorldTranslation obj))
425 initial-sense-rotation (Quaternion. (.getRotation sense))
426 base-anti-rotation (.inverse (.getWorldRotation obj))]
427 (.addControl
428 obj
429 (proxy [AbstractControl] []
430 (controlUpdate [tpf]
431 (let [total-rotation
432 (.mult base-anti-rotation (.getWorldRotation obj))]
433 (.setLocation
434 sense
435 (.add
436 (.mult total-rotation sense-offset)
437 (.getWorldTranslation obj)))
438 (.setRotation
439 sense
440 (.mult total-rotation initial-sense-rotation))))
441 (controlRender [_ _])))))
442 #+end_src
444 Here is some example code which shows how a camera bound to a blue box
445 with =(bind-sense)= moves as the box is buffeted by white cannonballs.
447 #+name: test
448 #+begin_src clojure
449 (defn test-bind-sense
450 "Show a camera that stays in the same relative position to a blue
451 cube."
452 []
453 (let [eye-pos (Vector3f. 0 30 0)
454 rock (box 1 1 1 :color ColorRGBA/Blue
455 :position (Vector3f. 0 10 0)
456 :mass 30)
457 table (box 3 1 10 :color ColorRGBA/Gray :mass 0
458 :position (Vector3f. 0 -3 0))]
459 (world
460 (nodify [rock table])
461 standard-debug-controls
462 (fn init [world]
463 (let [cam (doto (.clone (.getCamera world))
464 (.setLocation eye-pos)
465 (.lookAt Vector3f/ZERO
466 Vector3f/UNIT_X))]
467 (bind-sense rock cam)
468 (.setTimer world (RatchetTimer. 60))
469 (Capture/captureVideo
470 world (File. "/home/r/proj/cortex/render/bind-sense0"))
471 (add-camera!
472 world cam
473 (comp (view-image
474 (File. "/home/r/proj/cortex/render/bind-sense1"))
475 BufferedImage!))
476 (add-camera! world (.getCamera world) no-op)))
477 no-op)))
478 #+end_src
480 #+begin_html
481 <video controls="controls" width="755">
482 <source src="../video/bind-sense.ogg" type="video/ogg"
483 preload="none" poster="../images/aurellem-1280x480.png" />
484 </video>
485 #+end_html
487 With this, eyes are easy --- you just bind the camera closer to the
488 desired object, and set it to look outward instead of inward as it
489 does in the video.
491 (nb : the video was created with the following commands)
493 *** Combine Frames with ImageMagick
494 #+begin_src clojure :results silent
495 (ns cortex.video.magick
496 (:import java.io.File)
497 (:use clojure.contrib.shell-out))
499 (defn combine-images []
500 (let
501 [idx (atom -1)
502 left (rest
503 (sort
504 (file-seq (File. "/home/r/proj/cortex/render/bind-sense0/"))))
505 right (rest
506 (sort
507 (file-seq
508 (File. "/home/r/proj/cortex/render/bind-sense1/"))))
509 sub (rest
510 (sort
511 (file-seq
512 (File. "/home/r/proj/cortex/render/bind-senseB/"))))
513 sub* (concat sub (repeat 1000 (last sub)))]
514 (dorun
515 (map
516 (fn [im-1 im-2 sub]
517 (sh "convert" (.getCanonicalPath im-1)
518 (.getCanonicalPath im-2) "+append"
519 (.getCanonicalPath sub) "-append"
520 (.getCanonicalPath
521 (File. "/home/r/proj/cortex/render/bind-sense/"
522 (format "%07d.png" (swap! idx inc))))))
523 left right sub*))))
524 #+end_src
526 *** Encode Frames with ffmpeg
528 #+begin_src sh :results silent
529 cd /home/r/proj/cortex/render/
530 ffmpeg -r 30 -i bind-sense/%07d.png -b:v 9000k -vcodec libtheora bind-sense.ogg
531 #+end_src
533 * Headers
534 #+name: sense-header
535 #+begin_src clojure
536 (ns cortex.sense
537 "Here are functions useful in the construction of two or more
538 sensors/effectors."
539 {:author "Robert McInytre"}
540 (:use (cortex world util))
541 (:import ij.process.ImageProcessor)
542 (:import jme3tools.converters.ImageToAwt)
543 (:import java.awt.image.BufferedImage)
544 (:import com.jme3.collision.CollisionResults)
545 (:import com.jme3.bounding.BoundingBox)
546 (:import (com.jme3.scene Node Spatial))
547 (:import com.jme3.scene.control.AbstractControl)
548 (:import (com.jme3.math Quaternion Vector3f))
549 (:import javax.imageio.ImageIO)
550 (:import java.io.File)
551 (:import (javax.swing JPanel JFrame SwingUtilities)))
552 #+end_src
554 #+name: test-header
555 #+begin_src clojure
556 (ns cortex.test.sense
557 (:use (cortex world util sense vision))
558 (:import
559 java.io.File
560 (com.jme3.math Vector3f ColorRGBA)
561 (com.aurellem.capture RatchetTimer Capture)))
562 #+end_src
564 * Source Listing
565 - [[../src/cortex/sense.clj][cortex.sense]]
566 - [[../src/cortex/test/sense.clj][cortex.test.sense]]
567 - [[../assets/Models/subtitles/subtitles.blend][subtitles.blend]]
568 - [[../assets/Models/subtitles/Lake_CraterLake03_sm.hdr][subtitles reflection map]]
569 #+html: <ul> <li> <a href="../org/sense.org">This org file</a> </li> </ul>
570 - [[http://hg.bortreb.com ][source-repository]]
572 * Next
573 Now that some of the preliminaries are out of the way, in the [[./body.org][next
574 post]] I'll create a simulated body.
577 * COMMENT generate source
578 #+begin_src clojure :tangle ../src/cortex/sense.clj
579 <<sense-header>>
580 <<blender-1>>
581 <<blender-2>>
582 <<topology-1>>
583 <<topology-2>>
584 <<node-1>>
585 <<node-2>>
586 <<view-senses>>
587 #+end_src
589 #+begin_src clojure :tangle ../src/cortex/test/sense.clj
590 <<test-header>>
591 <<test>>
592 #+end_src
594 #+begin_src clojure :tangle ../src/cortex/video/magick.clj
595 <<magick>>
596 #+end_src