Thin Plate Spline (TIN)

(c) 2006 by O.Conrad
Creates a 'Thin Plate Spline' function for each triangle of a TIN and uses it for subsequent gridding. The TIN is internally created from the scattered data points input. The 'Neighbourhood' option determines the number of points used for the spline generation. 'Immediate neighbourhood' includes the points of the triangle as well as the immediate neighbour points. 'Level 1' adds the neighbours of the immediate neighbourhood and 'level 2' adds the neighbours of 'level 1' neighbours too. A higher neighbourhood degree reduces sharp breaks but also increases the computation time.

References:
- Donato G., Belongie S. (2002): 'Approximation Methods for Thin Plate Spline Mappings and Principal Warps', In Heyden, A., Sparr, G., Nielsen, M., Johansen, P. (Eds.): 'Computer Vision - ECCV 2002: 7th European Conference on Computer Vision, Copenhagen, Denmark, May 28-31, 2002', Proceedings, Part III, Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer-Verlag Heidelberg; pp.21-31.

- Elonen, J. (2005): 'Thin Plate Spline editor - an example program in C++', http://elonen.iki.fi/code/tpsdemo/index.html.

Parameters

Points
Input Shapes
Attribute
Table field
Target Grid
Choice
Available choices: user defined, grid
Regularisation
Floating point
Neighbourhood
Choice
Available choices: immediate, level 1, level 2
Add Frame
Boolean
Left
Floating point
Right
Floating point
Bottom
Floating point
Top
Floating point
Cellsize
Floating point
Columns
Integer
Rows
Integer
Grid
Output Data Object
Grid system
Grid system
Grid
Output Grid