Abstract

Ellipse fitting is a highly researched and mature topic. Surprisingly, however, no existing method has thus far considered the data point eccentricity in its ellipse fitting procedure. Here, we introduce the concept of eccentricity of a data point, in analogy with the idea of ellipse eccentricity. We then show empirically that, irrespective of ellipse fitting method used, the root mean square error (RMSE) of a fit increases with the eccentricity of the data point set. The main contribution of the paper is based on the hypothesis that if the data point set were pre-processed to strategically add additional data points in regions of high eccentricity, then the quality of a fit could be improved. Conditional validity of this hypothesis is demonstrated mathematically using a model scenario. Based on this confirmation we propose an algorithm that pre-processes the data so that data points with high eccentricity are replicated. The improvement of ellipse fitting is then demonstrated empirically in real-world application of 3D reconstruction of a plant root system for phenotypic analysis. The degree of improvement for different underlying ellipse fitting methods as a function of data noise level is also analysed. We show that almost every method tested, irrespective of whether it minimizes algebraic error or geometric error, shows improvement in the fit following data augmentation using the proposed pre-processing algorithm.

Highlights

  • The task of identifying and fitting ellipses to point data is an important and recurring problem in the mathematical and computer sciences, with a broad spectrum of applications

  • In this paper we proposed augmenting point data based on a new eccentricity function of the data points to improve the solution to the ellipse fitting problem

  • The method is somewhat analogous to the re-sampling method for Monte Carlo simulations as the method strategically adds data points in problematic regions of high eccentricity

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Summary

Introduction

The task of identifying and fitting ellipses to point data is an important and recurring problem in the mathematical and computer sciences, with a broad spectrum of applications. In his Principia (Book I, Section IV, Propositions 22-27) [1], Newton outlined how one could establish, precisely, the unique ellipse satisfying five pieces of information, either passing through given points or being tangent to given lines. Uniqueness immediately becomes questionable when there are more than five pieces of independent data to fit, especially when each data point possesses some degree of measurement or observation error.

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