
In an experiment with regular
polygons, the intuitive idea is that the more vertices a regular polygon has,
the more similar it is to a circle. Our measure yields the desirable results.
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| 1220 | 662 | 313 | 193 |
Basri et al. further argument, that similarity measures should be sensitive to the structure of visual parts of objects. To check this property, they suggest that bending an object at a part boundary should imply less changes than bending in the middle of a part.
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| 216 | 974 |
| . | Table1
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Table1
| 0 | 466 | 3193 | 2450 | 1880 | 3292 |
Table2
| 466 | 0 | 3869 | 2728 | 2544 | 2843 |
Table3
| 3193 | 3869 | 0 | 1690 | 1839 | 3873 |
Table4
| 2450 | 2728 | 1690 | 0 | 567 | 1887 |
Table5
| 1880 | 2544 | 1839 | 567 | 0 | 2765 |
Table6
| 3292 | 2843 | 3873 | 1887 | 2765 | 0 |
Please compare this table to the one in Basri et al. !
Best Matches:
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Please compare all results to the ones given in Basri et al. !
Continue with next example
Return to matching: results
Continue with Formal Description