Expand this Topic clickable element to expand a topic
Skip to content
Optica Publishing Group

Visual communication with retinex coding

Not Accessible

Your library or personal account may give you access

Abstract

Visual communication with retinex coding seeks to suppress the spatial variation of the irradiance (e.g., shadows) across natural scenes and preserve only the spatial detail and the reflectance (or the lightness) of the surface itself. The separation of reflectance from irradiance begins with nonlinear retinex coding that sharply and clearly enhances edges and preserves their contrast, and it ends with a Wiener filter that restores images from this edge and contrast information. An approximate small-signal model of image gathering with retinex coding is found to consist of the familiar difference-of-Gaussian bandpass filter and a locally adaptive automatic-gain control. A linear representation of this model is used to develop expressions within the small-signal constraint for the information rate and the theoretical minimum data rate of the retinex-coded signal and for the maximum-realizable fidelity of the images restored from this signal. Extensive computations and simulations demonstrate that predictions based on these figures of merit correlate closely with perceptual and measured performance. Hence these predictions can serve as a general guide for the design of visual communication channels that produce images with a visual quality that consistently approaches the best possible sharpness, clarity, and reflectance constancy, even for nonuniform irradiances. The suppression of shadows in the restored image is found to be constrained inherently more by the sharpness of their penumbra than by their depth.

© 2000 Optical Society of America

Full Article  |  PDF Article
More Like This
Assessment of the Wiener–Retinex process

Rachel Alter-Gartenberg, Scott R. Nolf, and Richard E. Davis
Appl. Opt. 41(23) 4783-4805 (2002)

Image gathering and restoration: information and visual quality

Judith A. McCormick, Rachel Alter-Gartenberg, and Friedrich O. Huck
J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 6(7) 987-1005 (1989)

Image-gathering system design for information and fidelity

Friedrich O. Huck, Carl L. Fales, Judith A. McCormick, and Stephen K. Park
J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 5(3) 285-299 (1988)

Cited By

You do not have subscription access to this journal. Cited by links are available to subscribers only. You may subscribe either as an Optica member, or as an authorized user of your institution.

Contact your librarian or system administrator
or
Login to access Optica Member Subscription

Figures (16)

You do not have subscription access to this journal. Figure files are available to subscribers only. You may subscribe either as an Optica member, or as an authorized user of your institution.

Contact your librarian or system administrator
or
Login to access Optica Member Subscription

Equations (83)

You do not have subscription access to this journal. Equations are available to subscribers only. You may subscribe either as an Optica member, or as an authorized user of your institution.

Contact your librarian or system administrator
or
Login to access Optica Member Subscription

Select as filters


Select Topics Cancel
© Copyright 2024 | Optica Publishing Group. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.