Physically-based Book Simulation with Freeform Developable Surfaces

Thomas Wolf, Victor Cornillere, Olga Sorkine-Hornung

Reading books or articles digitally has become accessible and widespread thanks to the large amount of affordable mobile devices and distribution platforms. However, little effort has been devoted to improving the digital book reading experience,despite studies showing disadvantages of digital text media consumption, such as diminished memory recall and enjoyment,compared to physical books. In addition, a vast amount of physical, printed books of interest exist, many of them rare andnot easily physically accessible, such as out-of-print art books, first editions, or historical tomes secured in museums. Digital replicas of such books are typically either purely text based, or consist of photographed pages, where much of the essenceof leafing through and experiencing the actual artifact is lost. In this work, we devise a method to recreate the experience of reading and interacting with a physical book in a digital 3D environment. Leveraging recent work on static modeling of freeform developable surfaces, which exhibit paper-like properties, we design a method for dynamic physical simulation of such surfaces, accounting for gravity and handling collisions to simulate pages in a book. We propose a mix of 2D and 3Dmodels, specifically tailored to represent books to achieve a computationally fast simulation, running in real time on mobile devices. Our system enables users to lift, bend and flip book pages by holding them at arbitrary locations and provides a holistic interactive experience of a virtual 3D book

Physically-based Book Simulation with Freeform Developable Surfaces

(Comments are closed)