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Color Constancy in the Nearly Natural Image. 2. Achromatic loci

by David H. Brainard - Journal of the Optical Society of America A , 1998
"... This paper presents experiments that measure successive constancy under similarly natural conditions ..."
Abstract - Cited by 43 (11 self) - Add to MetaCart
This paper presents experiments that measure successive constancy under similarly natural conditions

Color constancy in the nearly natural image. I. Asymmetric matches

by David H. Brainard, Wendy A. Brunt, Jon M. Speigle - Journal of the Optical Society ofAmerica A , 1997
"... This paper presents experiments designed to extend our understanding of color constancy. To perform our experiments, we have constructed and calibrated an experimental room where the illumination is under computer control. An apparatus in the room allows us to measure asymmetric color matches 10,15 ..."
Abstract - Cited by 13 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
,15,18,26,45 under nearly natural viewing conditions. Our emphasis is on developing models that characterize the effect of the illuminant on color appearance

Comparing Images Using the Hausdorff Distance

by Daniel P. Huttenlocher, Gregory A. Klanderman, William J. Rucklidge - IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PATTERN ANALYSIS AND MACHINE INTELLIGENCE , 1993
"... The Hausdorff distance measures the extent to which each point of a `model' set lies near some point of an `image' set and vice versa. Thus this distance can be used to determine the degree of resemblance between two objects that are superimposed on one another. In this paper we provide ef ..."
Abstract - Cited by 659 (10 self) - Add to MetaCart
The Hausdorff distance measures the extent to which each point of a `model' set lies near some point of an `image' set and vice versa. Thus this distance can be used to determine the degree of resemblance between two objects that are superimposed on one another. In this paper we provide

Relations between the statistics of natural images and the response properties of cortical cells

by David J. Field - J. Opt. Soc. Am. A , 1987
"... The relative efficiency of any particular image-coding scheme should be defined only in relation to the class of images that the code is likely to encounter. To understand the representation of images by the mammalian visual system, it might therefore be useful to consider the statistics of images f ..."
Abstract - Cited by 831 (18 self) - Add to MetaCart
from the natural environment (i.e., images with trees, rocks, bushes, etc). In this study, various coding schemes are compared in relation to how they represent the information in such natural images. The coefficients of such codes are represented by arrays of mechanisms that respond to local regions

Representing Moving Images with Layers

by John Y.A. Wang, Edward H. Adelson , 1994
"... We describe a system for representing moving images with sets of overlapping layers. Each layer contains an intensity map that defines the additive values of each pixel, along with an alpha map that serves as a mask indicating the transparency. The layers are ordered in depth and they occlude each o ..."
Abstract - Cited by 542 (11 self) - Add to MetaCart
other in accord with the rules of compositing. Velocity maps define how the layers are to be warped over time. The layered representation is more flexible than standard image transforms and can capture many important properties of natural image sequences. We describe some methods for decomposing image

Near Optimal Signal Recovery From Random Projections: Universal Encoding Strategies?

by Emmanuel J. Candès , Terence Tao , 2004
"... Suppose we are given a vector f in RN. How many linear measurements do we need to make about f to be able to recover f to within precision ɛ in the Euclidean (ℓ2) metric? Or more exactly, suppose we are interested in a class F of such objects— discrete digital signals, images, etc; how many linear m ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1513 (20 self) - Add to MetaCart
Suppose we are given a vector f in RN. How many linear measurements do we need to make about f to be able to recover f to within precision ɛ in the Euclidean (ℓ2) metric? Or more exactly, suppose we are interested in a class F of such objects— discrete digital signals, images, etc; how many linear

Basic objects in natural categories

by Eleanor Rosch, Carolyn B. Mervis, Wayne D. Gray, David M. Johnson, Penny Boyes-braem - COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY , 1976
"... Categorizations which humans make of the concrete world are not arbitrary but highly determined. In taxonomies of concrete objects, there is one level of abstraction at which the most basic category cuts are made. Basic categories are those which carry the most information, possess the highest categ ..."
Abstract - Cited by 892 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
to be the most inclusive categories for which a concrete image of the category as a whole can be formed, to be the first categorizations made during perception of the environment, to be the earliest categories sorted and earliest named by children, and to be the categories

Efficient graph-based image segmentation.

by Pedro F Felzenszwalb , Daniel P Huttenlocher - International Journal of Computer Vision, , 2004
"... Abstract. This paper addresses the problem of segmenting an image into regions. We define a predicate for measuring the evidence for a boundary between two regions using a graph-based representation of the image. We then develop an efficient segmentation algorithm based on this predicate, and show ..."
Abstract - Cited by 940 (1 self) - Add to MetaCart
runs in time nearly linear in the number of graph edges and is also fast in practice. An important characteristic of the method is its ability to preserve detail in low-variability image regions while ignoring detail in high-variability regions.

Bilateral Filtering for Gray and Color Images

by C. Tomasi , 1998
"... tomasi @ cs.stanford.edu Bilateral filtering smooths images while preserving edges, by means of a nonlinear combination of nearby image values. The method is noniterative, local, and sim-ple. It combines gray levels or colors based on both their geometric closeness and their photometric similariv, a ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1156 (2 self) - Add to MetaCart
, and prefers near values to distant values in both domain and range. In contrast with filters that operate on the three bands of a color image separately, a bilateral filter can en-force the perceptual metric underlying the CIE-Lab color space, and smooth colors and preserve edges in a way that is tuned

Learning to detect natural image boundaries using local brightness, color, and texture cues

by David R. Martin, Charless C. Fowlkes, Jitendra Malik - PAMI , 2004
"... The goal of this work is to accurately detect and localize boundaries in natural scenes using local image measurements. We formulate features that respond to characteristic changes in brightness, color, and texture associated with natural boundaries. In order to combine the information from these fe ..."
Abstract - Cited by 625 (18 self) - Add to MetaCart
The goal of this work is to accurately detect and localize boundaries in natural scenes using local image measurements. We formulate features that respond to characteristic changes in brightness, color, and texture associated with natural boundaries. In order to combine the information from
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