How to caluclate centroid of a voronoi cell of a voronoi diagram.

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Suppose I have generated a voronoi diagram by following code:
X=[1 2 1.1 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.3 1.2 1.8 2.1 2.2];
Y=[1.5 1.3 1.5 1.8 1.4 1.6 2.5 2.3 2.4 1.1 1.8];
voronoi(X,Y)
Now, once the voronoi diagram is generated, how to find the centroid of each voronoi cell. I know there are lot of algorithms. One of them is Lloyd's Algorithm, the code of which is given here
but after running the script , I am getting this error:
'poly2cw' requires Mapping Toolbox.
Error in lloydsAlgorithm>VoronoiBounded (line 178)
[X2, Y2] = poly2cw(V(C{ij},1),V(C{ij},2));
Error in lloydsAlgorithm (line 89)
[v,c]=VoronoiBounded(Px,Py, crs);
Can anyone help me in this.
  1 Kommentar
Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong am 3 Jan. 2023
Bearbeitet: Bruno Luong am 3 Jan. 2023
The Vorinoi cells that contain a seed on the hull are unbounded, there is no centroid for such cells.
MATLAB voronoi just cuts them with an empiric bounding box. So of you use those outer vertexes the result is randomly cut.

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Akzeptierte Antwort

Matt J
Matt J am 3 Jan. 2023
Bearbeitet: Matt J am 3 Jan. 2023
The voronoi cells are always convex, so assuming it is bounded, you can just take the mean of all the vertices of each cell.
X=[1 2 1.1 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.3 1.2 1.8 2.1 2.2];
Y=[1.5 1.3 1.5 1.8 1.4 1.6 2.5 2.3 2.4 1.1 1.8];
[V,C]=voronoin([X;Y]');
centroids = cell2mat( cellfun(@(c) mean(V(c,:),1)' , C','uni', 0) )
centroids = 2×11
Inf 1.9180 1.1707 1.2800 1.1995 1.6029 Inf Inf Inf Inf Inf Inf 1.3544 1.4421 1.8802 0.5374 1.6873 Inf Inf Inf Inf Inf
  4 Kommentare
Matt J
Matt J am 4 Jan. 2023
Because you didn't download the files at the link I gave you.
Pallov Anand
Pallov Anand am 4 Jan. 2023
Oh yes, my bad. I just downloaded voronoiPolyhedrons.m and was going through the overview given here
Now, I downloaded and its working now. Thanks a lot mate.

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Weitere Antworten (1)

Constantino Carlos Reyes-Aldasoro
This is not a trivial problem especially because the voronoi algorithm does not give you a series of closed polygons, i.e. change the axis of your current problem
X=[1 2 1.1 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.3 1.2 1.8 2.1 2.2];
Y=[1.5 1.3 1.5 1.8 1.4 1.6 2.5 2.3 2.4 1.1 1.8];
voronoi(X,Y)
axis([-2 4 -3 4])
You will see that the voronoi is finding lines that divide the points that you have provided, but it is not essentially generating polygons. Only some of these would be closed and then a centroid makes sense, but not for all of them
  1 Kommentar
Pallov Anand
Pallov Anand am 3 Jan. 2023
Bearbeitet: Pallov Anand am 3 Jan. 2023
Ya, right. Lets take one region with vertices:
(1.7038, 1.3731) ; (1.8661, 1.6435); (1.7780, 1.9520); (1.6864, 1.9864); (1.29, 1.59); (1.2929, 1.5786)
For this region, I think centroid can be calculated and it should lie inside the region.

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