3 research outputs found
Contrast Enhancement of Brightness-Distorted Images by Improved Adaptive Gamma Correction
As an efficient image contrast enhancement (CE) tool, adaptive gamma
correction (AGC) was previously proposed by relating gamma parameter with
cumulative distribution function (CDF) of the pixel gray levels within an
image. ACG deals well with most dimmed images, but fails for globally bright
images and the dimmed images with local bright regions. Such two categories of
brightness-distorted images are universal in real scenarios, such as improper
exposure and white object regions. In order to attenuate such deficiencies,
here we propose an improved AGC algorithm. The novel strategy of negative
images is used to realize CE of the bright images, and the gamma correction
modulated by truncated CDF is employed to enhance the dimmed ones. As such,
local over-enhancement and structure distortion can be alleviated. Both
qualitative and quantitative experimental results show that our proposed method
yields consistently good CE results
Dorsal hand vein image enhancement using fusion of clahe and fuzzy adaptive gamma
Enhancement of captured hand vein images is essential for a number of purposes, such as accurate biometric identification and ease of medical intravenous access. This paper presents an improved hand vein image enhancement technique based on weighted average fusion of contrast limited adaptive histogram equalization (CLAHE) and fuzzy adaptive gamma (FAG). The proposed technique is applied using three stages. Firstly, grey level intensities with CLAHE are locally applied to image pixels for contrast enhancement. Secondly, the grey level intensities are then globally transformed into membership planes and modified with FAG operator for the same purposes. Finally, the resultant images from CLAHE and FAG are fused using improved weighted averaging methods for clearer vein patterns. Then, matched filter with first-order derivative Gaussian (MF-FODG) is employed to segment vein patterns. The proposed technique was tested on self-acquired dorsal hand vein images as well as images from the SUAS databases. The performance of the proposed technique is compared with various other image enhancement techniques based on mean square error (MSE), peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR), and structural similarity index measurement (SSIM). The proposed enhancement technique’s impact on the segmentation process has also been evaluated using sensitivity, accuracy, and dice coefficient. The experimental results show that the proposed enhancement technique can significantly enhance the hand vein patterns and improve the detection of dorsal hand veins