4,116 research outputs found
Gabor Barcodes for Medical Image Retrieval
In recent years, advances in medical imaging have led to the emergence of
massive databases, containing images from a diverse range of modalities. This
has significantly heightened the need for automated annotation of the images on
one side, and fast and memory-efficient content-based image retrieval systems
on the other side. Binary descriptors have recently gained more attention as a
potential vehicle to achieve these goals. One of the recently introduced binary
descriptors for tagging of medical images are Radon barcodes (RBCs) that are
driven from Radon transform via local thresholding. Gabor transform is also a
powerful transform to extract texture-based information. Gabor features have
exhibited robustness against rotation, scale, and also photometric
disturbances, such as illumination changes and image noise in many
applications. This paper introduces Gabor Barcodes (GBCs), as a novel framework
for the image annotation. To find the most discriminative GBC for a given query
image, the effects of employing Gabor filters with different parameters, i.e.,
different sets of scales and orientations, are investigated, resulting in
different barcode lengths and retrieval performances. The proposed method has
been evaluated on the IRMA dataset with 193 classes comprising of 12,677 x-ray
images for indexing, and 1,733 x-rays images for testing. A total error score
as low as ( accuracy for the first hit) was achieved.Comment: To appear in proceedings of The 2016 IEEE International Conference on
Image Processing (ICIP 2016), Sep 25-28, 2016, Phoenix, Arizona, US
Radon-Gabor Barcodes for Medical Image Retrieval
In recent years, with the explosion of digital images on the Web,
content-based retrieval has emerged as a significant research area. Shapes,
textures, edges and segments may play a key role in describing the content of
an image. Radon and Gabor transforms are both powerful techniques that have
been widely studied to extract shape-texture-based information. The combined
Radon-Gabor features may be more robust against scale/rotation variations,
presence of noise, and illumination changes. The objective of this paper is to
harness the potentials of both Gabor and Radon transforms in order to introduce
expressive binary features, called barcodes, for image annotation/tagging
tasks. We propose two different techniques: Gabor-of-Radon-Image Barcodes
(GRIBCs), and Guided-Radon-of-Gabor Barcodes (GRGBCs). For validation, we
employ the IRMA x-ray dataset with 193 classes, containing 12,677 training
images and 1,733 test images. A total error score as low as 322 and 330 were
achieved for GRGBCs and GRIBCs, respectively. This corresponds to retrieval accuracy for the first hit.Comment: To appear in proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on
Pattern Recognition (ICPR 2016), Cancun, Mexico, December 201
A preliminary approach to intelligent x-ray imaging for baggage inspection at airports
Identifying explosives in baggage at airports relies on being able to characterize the materials that make up an X-ray image. If a suspicion is generated during the imaging process (step 1), the image data could be enhanced by adapting the scanning parameters (step 2). This paper addresses the first part of this problem and uses textural signatures to recognize and characterize materials and hence enabling system control. Directional Gabor-type filtering was applied to a series of different X-ray images. Images were processed in such a way as to simulate a line scanning geometry. Based on our experiments with images of industrial standards and our own samples it was found that different materials could be characterized in terms of the frequency range and orientation of the filters. It was also found that the signal strength generated by the filters could be used as an indicator of visibility and optimum imaging conditions predicted
Perceptual-based textures for scene labeling: a bottom-up and a top-down approach
Due to the semantic gap, the automatic interpretation of digital images is a very challenging task. Both the segmentation and classification are intricate because of the high variation of the data. Therefore, the application of appropriate features is of utter importance. This paper presents biologically inspired texture features for material classification and interpreting outdoor scenery images. Experiments show that the presented texture features obtain the best classification results for material recognition compared to other well-known texture features, with an average classification rate of 93.0%. For scene analysis, both a bottom-up and top-down strategy are employed to bridge the semantic gap. At first, images are segmented into regions based on the perceptual texture and next, a semantic label is calculated for these regions. Since this emerging interpretation is still error prone, domain knowledge is ingested to achieve a more accurate description of the depicted scene. By applying both strategies, 91.9% of the pixels from outdoor scenery images obtained a correct label
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