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  2. Spline (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spline_(mathematics)

    The next most simple spline has degree 1. It is also called a linear spline. A closed linear spline (i.e, the first knot and the last are the same) in the plane is just a polygon. A common spline is the natural cubic spline. A cubic spline has degree 3 with continuity C 2, i.e. the values and first and second derivatives are continuous. Natural ...

  3. Spline interpolation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spline_interpolation

    In the mathematical field of numerical analysis, spline interpolation is a form of interpolation where the interpolant is a special type of piecewise polynomial called a spline. That is, instead of fitting a single, high-degree polynomial to all of the values at once, spline interpolation fits low-degree polynomials to small subsets of the ...

  4. Monotone cubic interpolation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monotone_cubic_interpolation

    Example showing non-monotone cubic interpolation (in red) and monotone cubic interpolation (in blue) of a monotone data set. Monotone interpolation can be accomplished using cubic Hermite spline with the tangents modified to ensure the monotonicity of the resulting Hermite spline.

  5. Akima spline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akima_spline

    In applied mathematics, an Akima spline is a type of non-smoothing spline that gives good fits to curves where the second derivative is rapidly varying. [1] The Akima spline was published by Hiroshi Akima in 1970 from Akima's pursuit of a cubic spline curve that would appear more natural and smooth, akin to an intuitively hand-drawn curve.

  6. Control point (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control_point_(mathematics)

    In computer-aided geometric design a control point is a member of a set of points used to determine the shape of a spline curve or, more generally, a surface or higher-dimensional object.

  7. Smoothing spline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoothing_spline

    Smoothing splines are related to, but distinct from: Regression splines. In this method, the data is fitted to a set of spline basis functions with a reduced set of knots, typically by least squares. No roughness penalty is used. (See also multivariate adaptive regression splines.) Penalized splines. This combines the reduced knots of ...

  8. Category:Splines (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Splines_(mathematics)

    See also Subdivision surfaces, which is an emerging alternative to spline-based surfaces. Pages in category "Splines (mathematics)" The following 30 pages are in this category, out of 30 total.

  9. Centripetal Catmull–Rom spline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centripetal_Catmull–Rom...

    The method is termed active spline model. [5] The model is devised on the basis of active shape model, but uses centripetal Catmull-Rom spline to join two successive points (active shape model uses simple straight line), so that the total number of points necessary to depict a shape is less. The use of centripetal Catmull-Rom spline makes the ...