839 research outputs found

    Color Image Enhancement Method Based on Weighted Image Guided Filtering

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    A novel color image enhancement method is proposed based on Retinex to enhance color images under non-uniform illumination or poor visibility conditions. Different from the conventional Retinex algorithms, the Weighted Guided Image Filter is used as a surround function instead of the Gaussian filter to estimate the background illumination, which can overcome the drawbacks of local blur and halo artifact that may appear by Gaussian filter. To avoid color distortion, the image is converted to the HSI color model, and only the intensity channel is enhanced. Then a linear color restoration algorithm is adopted to convert the enhanced intensity image back to the RGB color model, which ensures the hue is constant and undistorted. Experimental results show that the proposed method is effective to enhance both color and gray images with low exposure and non-uniform illumination, resulting in better visual quality than traditional method. At the same time, the objective evaluation indicators are also superior to the conventional methods. In addition, the efficiency of the proposed method is also improved thanks to the linear color restoration algorithm.Comment: 15 page

    Contributions of Continuous Max-Flow Theory to Medical Image Processing

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    Discrete graph cuts and continuous max-flow theory have created a paradigm shift in many areas of medical image processing. As previous methods limited themselves to analytically solvable optimization problems or guaranteed only local optimizability to increasingly complex and non-convex functionals, current methods based now rely on describing an optimization problem in a series of general yet simple functionals with a global, but non-analytic, solution algorithms. This has been increasingly spurred on by the availability of these general-purpose algorithms in an open-source context. Thus, graph-cuts and max-flow have changed every aspect of medical image processing from reconstruction to enhancement to segmentation and registration. To wax philosophical, continuous max-flow theory in particular has the potential to bring a high degree of mathematical elegance to the field, bridging the conceptual gap between the discrete and continuous domains in which we describe different imaging problems, properties and processes. In Chapter 1, we use the notion of infinitely dense and infinitely densely connected graphs to transfer between the discrete and continuous domains, which has a certain sense of mathematical pedantry to it, but the resulting variational energy equations have a sense of elegance and charm. As any application of the principle of duality, the variational equations have an enigmatic side that can only be decoded with time and patience. The goal of this thesis is to show the contributions of max-flow theory through image enhancement and segmentation, increasing incorporation of topological considerations and increasing the role played by user knowledge and interactivity. These methods will be rigorously grounded in calculus of variations, guaranteeing fuzzy optimality and providing multiple solution approaches to addressing each individual problem
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