1,121 research outputs found

    Technical Aspects of Web Photography as a Medium of Tourism Development

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    Information and communication technology is an important factor for national, regional and local sustainable tourism development according to the long-term Croatian national strategic plan. New forms of information, such as web sites; new media, materials, political and social change, all influence tourists’ decisions when choosing specific destinations. The aim of this research is to determine, based on the analysis of the tourism media campaign, the relationship between new communication trends and the application of photography as a medium that influences the experience when choosing a destination and the importance of crucial information factors on web pages based on their technical and visual characteristics

    Investigations into colour constancy by bridging human and computer colour vision

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    PhD ThesisThe mechanism of colour constancy within the human visual system has long been of great interest to researchers within the psychophysical and image processing communities. With the maturation of colour imaging techniques for both scientific and artistic applications the importance of colour capture accuracy has consistently increased. Colour offers a great deal more information for the viewer than grayscale imagery, ranging from object detection to food ripeness and health estimation amongst many others. However these tasks rely upon the colour constancy process in order to discount scene illumination to allow these tasks to be carried out. Psychophysical studies have attempted to uncover the inner workings of this mechanism, which would allow it to be reproduced algorithmically. This would allow the development of devices which can eventually capture and perceive colour in the same manner as a human viewer. These two communities have approached this challenge from opposite ends, and as such very different and largely unconnected approaches. This thesis investigates the development of studies and algorithms which bridge the two communities. Utilising findings from psychophysical studies as inspiration to firstly improve an existing image enhancement algorithm. Results are then compared to state of the art methods. Then, using further knowledge, and inspiration, of the human visual system to develop a novel colour constancy approach. This approach attempts to mimic and replicate the mechanism of colour constancy by investigating the use of a physiological colour space and specific scene contents to estimate illumination. Performance of the colour constancy mechanism within the visual system is then also investigated. The performance of the mechanism across different scenes and commonly and uncommonly encountered illuminations is tested. The importance of being able to bridge these two communities, with a successful colour constancy method, is then further illustrated with a case study investigating the human visual perception of the agricultural produce of tomatoes.EPSRC DTA: Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University

    Engineering data compendium. Human perception and performance. User's guide

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    The concept underlying the Engineering Data Compendium was the product of a research and development program (Integrated Perceptual Information for Designers project) aimed at facilitating the application of basic research findings in human performance to the design and military crew systems. The principal objective was to develop a workable strategy for: (1) identifying and distilling information of potential value to system design from the existing research literature, and (2) presenting this technical information in a way that would aid its accessibility, interpretability, and applicability by systems designers. The present four volumes of the Engineering Data Compendium represent the first implementation of this strategy. This is the first volume, the User's Guide, containing a description of the program and instructions for its use

    Semantik renk değişmezliği

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    Color constancy aims to perceive the actual color of an object, disregarding the effectof the light source. Recent works showed that utilizing the semantic information inan image enhances the performance of the computational color constancy methods.Considering the recent success of the segmentation methods and the increased numberof labeled images, we propose a color constancy method that combines individualilluminant estimations of detected objects which are computed using the classes of theobjects and their associated colors. Then we introduce a weighting system that valuesthe applicability of the object classes to the color constancy problem. Lastly, weintroduce another metric expressing the detected object and how well it fits the learnedmodel of its class. Finally, we evaluate our proposed method on a popular colorconstancy dataset, confirming that each weight addition enhances the performanceof the global illuminant estimation. Experimental results show promising results,outperforming the conventional methods while competing with the state of the artmethods.--M.S. - Master of Scienc

    Colour for behavioural success

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    Colour information not only helps sustain the survival of animal species by guiding sexual selection and foraging behaviour but also is an important factor in the cultural and technological development of our own species. This is illustrated by examples from the visual arts and from state-of-the-art imaging technology, where the strategic use of colour has become a powerful tool for guiding the planning and execution of interventional procedures. The functional role of colour information in terms of its potential benefits to behavioural success across the species is addressed in the introduction here to clarify why colour perception may have evolved to generate behavioural success. It is argued that evolutionary and environmental pressures influence not only colour trait production in the different species but also their ability to process and exploit colour information for goal-specific purposes. We then leap straight to the human primate with insight from current research on the facilitating role of colour cues on performance training with precision technology for image-guided surgical planning and intervention. It is shown that local colour cues in two-dimensional images generated by a surgical fisheye camera help individuals become more precise rapidly across a limited number of trial sets in simulator training for specific manual gestures with a tool. This facilitating effect of a local colour cue on performance evolution in a video-controlled simulator (pick-and-place) task can be explained in terms of colour-based figure-ground segregation facilitating attention to local image parts when more than two layers of subjective surface depth are present, as in all natural and surgical images

    Design of a Monocular Multi-Spectral Skin Detection, Melanin Estimation, and False-Alarm Suppression System

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    A real-time skin detection, false-alarm reduction, and melanin estimation system is designed targeting search and rescue (SAR) with application to special operations for manhunting and human measurement and signatures intelligence. A mathematical model of the system is developed and used to determine how the physical system performs under illumination, target-to-sensor distance, and target-type scenarios. This aspect is important to the SAR community to gain an understanding of the deployability in different operating environments. A multi-spectral approach is developed and consists of two short-wave infrared cameras and two visible cameras. Through an optical chain of lenses, custom designed and fabricated dichroic mirrors, and filters, each camera receives the correct spectral information to perform skin detection, melanin estimation, and false-alarm suppression. To get accurate skin detections under several illumination conditions, the signal processing is accomplished in reflectance space, which is estimated from known reflectance objects in the scene. Model-generated output of imaged skin, when converted to estimated reflectance, indicates a good correspondence with skin reflectance. Furthermore, measured and modeled estimates of skin reflectance indicate a good correspondence with skin reflectance

    A Study of Colour Rendering in the In-Camera Imaging Pipeline

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    Consumer cameras such as digital single-lens reflex camera (DSLR) and smartphone cameras have onboard hardware that applies a series of processing steps to transform the initial captured raw sensor image to the final output image that is provided to the user. These processing steps collectively make up the in-camera image processing pipeline. This dissertation aims to study the processing steps related to colour rendering which can be categorized into two stages. The first stage is to convert an image's sensor-specific raw colour space to a device-independent perceptual colour space. The second stage is to further process the image into a display-referred colour space and includes photo-finishing routines to make the image appear visually pleasing to a human. This dissertation makes four contributions towards the study of camera colour rendering. The first contribution is the development of a software-based research platform that closely emulates the in-camera image processing pipeline hardware. This platform allows the examination of the various image states of the captured image as it is processed from the sensor response to the final display output. Our second contribution is to demonstrate the advantage of having access to intermediate image states within the in-camera pipeline that provide more accurate colourimetric consistency among multiple cameras. Our third contribution is to analyze the current colourimetric method used by consumer cameras and to propose a modification that is able to improve its colour accuracy. Our fourth contribution is to describe how to customize a camera imaging pipeline using machine vision cameras to produce high-quality perceptual images for dermatological applications. The dissertation concludes with a summary and future directions

    Proceedings experiencing light 2009 : international conference on the effects of light on welbeing

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