数字图像处理外文翻译外文文献英文文献数字图像处理方法的研究.doc
《数字图像处理外文翻译外文文献英文文献数字图像处理方法的研究.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《数字图像处理外文翻译外文文献英文文献数字图像处理方法的研究.doc(15页珍藏版)》请在沃文网上搜索。
1、The research of digital image processing technique 1 IntroductionInterest in digital image processing methods stems from two principal application areas: improvement of pictorial information for human interpretation; and processing of image data for storage, transmission, and representation for auto
2、nomous machine perception. This chapter has several objectives: (1)to define the scope of the field that we call image processing; (2)to give a historical perspective of the origins of this field; (3)to give an idea of the state of the art in image processing by examining some of the principal area
3、in which it is applied; (4)to discuss briefly the principal approaches used in digital image processing; (5)to give an overview of the components contained in a typical, general-purpose image processing system; and (6) to provide direction to the books and other literature where image processing wor
4、k normally is reporter.1.1 What Is Digital Image Processing?An image may be defined as a two-dimensional function, f(x, y), where x and y are spatial (plane) coordinates, and the amplitude of f at any pair of coordinates (x, y) is called the intensity or gray level of the image at that point. When x
5、, y, and digital image. The field of digital image processing refers to processing digital images by means of a digital computer. Note that a digital image is composed of a finite number of elements, each of which has a particular location and value. These elements are referred to as picture element
6、s, image elements, pels, and pixels. Pixel is the term most widely used to denote the elements of a digital image. We consider these definitions in more formal terms in Chapter2. Vision is the most advanced of our senses, so it is not surprising that images play the single most important role in hum
7、an perception. However, unlike human who are limited to the visual band of the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum, imaging machines cover almost the entire EM spectrum, ranging from gamma to radio waves. They can operate on images generated by sources that human are not accustomed to associating with ima
8、ge. These include ultrasound, electron microscopy, and computer-generated images. Thus, digital image processing encompasses a wide and varied field of application. There is no general agreement among authors regarding where image processing stops and other related areas, such as image analysis and
9、computer vision, start. Sometimes a distinction is made by defining image processing as a discipline in which both the input and output of a process are images. We believe this to be a limiting and somewhat artificial boundary. For example, under this definition, even the trivial task of computing t
10、he average intensity of an image (which yields a single number) would not be considered an image processing operation. On the other hand, there are fields such as computer vision whose ultimate goal is to use computer to emulate human vision, including learning and being able to make inferences and
11、take actions based on visual inputs. This area itself is a branch of artificial intelligence (AI) whose objective is to emulate human intelligence. This field of AI is in its earliest stages of infancy in terms of development, with progress having been much slower than originally anticipated. The ar
12、ea of image analysis (also called image understanding) is in between image processing and computer vision. There are no clear-cut boundaries in the continuum from image processing at one end to computer vision at the other. However , one useful paradigm is to consider three types of computerized pro
13、cesses is this continuum: low-, mid-, and high-ever processes. Low-level processes involve primitive operation such as image preprocessing to reduce noise, contrast enhancement, and image sharpening. A low-level process is characterized by the fact that both its input and output are images. Mid-leve
14、l processing on images involves tasks such as segmentation (partitioning an image into regions or objects), description of those objects to reduce them to a form suitable for computer processing, and classification (recognition) of individual object. Amid-level process is characterized by the fact t
15、hat its inputs generally are images, but its output is attributes extracted from those images (e. g., edges contours, and the identity of individual object). Finally, higher-level processing involves “making sense” of an ensemble of recognized objects, as in image analysis, and, at the far end of th
16、e continuum, performing the cognitive function normally associated with vision. Based on the preceding comments, we see that a logical place of overlap between image processing and image analysis is the area of recognition of individual regions or objects in an image. Thus, what we call in this book
17、 digital image processing encompasses processes whose inputs and outputs are images and, in addition, encompasses processes that extract attributes from images, up to and including the recognition of individual objects. As a simple illustration to clarify these concepts, consider the area of automat
18、ed analysis of text. The processes of acquiring an image of the area containing the text. Preprocessing that images, extracting (segmenting) the individual characters, describing the characters in a form suitable for computer processing, and recognizing those individual characters are in the scope o
19、f what we call digital image processing in this book. Making sense of the content of the page may be viewed as being in the domain of image analysis and even computer vision, depending on the level of complexity implied by the statement “making cense.” As will become evident shortly, digital image p
20、rocessing, as we have defined it, is used successfully in a broad rang of areas of exceptional social and economic value. The concepts developed in the following chapters are the foundation for the methods used in those application areas.1.2 The Origins of Digital Image Processing One of the first a
21、pplications of digital images was in the newspaper industry, when pictures were first sent by submarine cable between London and NewYork. Introduction of the Bartlane cable picture transmission system in the early 1920s reduced the time required to transport a picture across the Atlantic from more t
22、han a week to less than three hours. Specialized printing equipment coded pictures for cable transmission and then reconstructed them at the receiving end. Figure 1.1 was transmitted in this way and reproduced on a telegraph printer fitted with typefaces simulating a halftone pattern. Some of the in
23、itial problems in improving the visual quality of these early digital pictures were related to the selection of printing procedures and the distribution of intensity levels. The printing method used to obtain Fig. 1.1 was abandoned toward the end of 1921 in favor of a technique based on photographic
24、 reproduction made from tapes perforated at the telegraph receiving terminal. Figure 1.2 shows an images obtained using this method. The improvements over Fig. 1.1 are evident, both in tonal quality and in resolution. FIGURE 1.1 A digital picture produced in FIGURE 1.2 A digital picture1921 from a c
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
10 积分
下载 | 加入VIP,下载更划算! |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 数字图像 处理 外文 翻译 文献 英文 方法 研究