181 research outputs found

    Digital Color Imaging

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    This paper surveys current technology and research in the area of digital color imaging. In order to establish the background and lay down terminology, fundamental concepts of color perception and measurement are first presented us-ing vector-space notation and terminology. Present-day color recording and reproduction systems are reviewed along with the common mathematical models used for representing these devices. Algorithms for processing color images for display and communication are surveyed, and a forecast of research trends is attempted. An extensive bibliography is provided

    Restoration of halftoned color-quantized images using linear estimator

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    Centre for Multimedia Signal Processing, Department of Electronic and Information EngineeringRefereed conference paper2006-2007 > Academic research: refereed > Refereed conference paperVersion of RecordPublishe

    Descreening of Color Halftone Images in the Frequency Domain

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    Scanning a halftone image introduces halftone artifacts, known as Moiré patterns, which significantly degrade the image quality. Printers that use amplitude modulation (AM) screening for halftone printing position dots in a periodic pattern. Therefore, frequencies relating halftoning are easily identifiable in the frequency domain. This paper proposes a method for descreening scanned color halftone images using a custom band reject filter designed to isolate and remove only the frequencies related to halftoning while leaving image edges sharp without image segmentation or edge detection. To enable hardware acceleration, the image is processed in small overlapped windows. The windows are filtered individually in the frequency domain, then pieced back together in a method that does not show blocking artifacts

    A POCS-based restoration algorithm for restoring halftoned color-quantized images

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    Centre for Multimedia Signal Processing, Department of Electronic and Information Engineering2006-2007 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe

    Restoration of error-diffused images using projection onto convex sets

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    Cataloged from PDF version of article.In this paper, a novel inverse halftoning method is proposed to restore a continuous tone image from a given half-tone image. A set theoretic formulation is used where three sets are defined using the prior information about the problem. A new spacedomain projection is introduced assuming the halftoning is performed using error diffusion, and the error diffusion filter kernel is known. The space-domain, frequency-domain, and space-scale domain projections are used alternately to obtain a feasible solution for the inverse halftoning problem which does not have a unique solution

    Media processor implementations of image rendering algorithms

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    Demands for fast execution of image processing are a driving force for today\u27s computing market. Many image processing applications require intense numeric calculations to be done on large sets of data with minimal overhead time. To meet this challenge, several approaches have been used. Custom-designed hardware devices are very fast implementations used in many systems today. However, these devices are very expensive and inflexible. General purpose computers with enhanced multimedia instructions offer much greater flexibility but process data at a much slower rate than the custom-hardware devices. Digital signal processors (DSP\u27s) and media processors, such as the MAP-CA created by Equator Technologies, Inc., may be an efficient alternative that provides a low-cost combination of speed and flexibility. Today, DSP\u27s and media processors are commonly used in image and video encoding and decoding, including JPEG and MPEG processing techniques. Little work has been done to determine how well these processors can perform other image process ing techniques, specifically image rendering for printing. This project explores various image rendering algorithms and the performance achieved by running them on a me dia processor to determine if this type of processor is a viable competitor in the image rendering domain. Performance measurements obtained when implementing rendering algorithms on the MAP-CA show that a 4.1 speedup can be achieved with neighborhood-type processes, while point-type processes achieve an average speedup of 21.7 as compared to general purpose processor implementations

    New methods for digital halftoning and inverse halftoning

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    Halftoning is the rendition of continuous-tone pictures on bi-level displays. Here we first review some of the halftoning algorithms which have a direct bearing on our paper and then describe some of the more recent advances in the field. Dot diffusion halftoning has the advantage of pixel-level parallelism, unlike the popular error diffusion halftoning method. We first review the dot diffusion algorithm and describe a recent method to improve its image quality by taking advantage of the Human Visual System function. Then we discuss the inverse halftoning problem: The reconstruction of a continuous tone image from its halftone. We briefly review the methods for inverse halftoning, and discuss the advantages of a recent algorithm, namely, the Look Up Table (LUT)Method. This method is extremely fast and achieves image quality comparable to that of the best known methods. It can be applied to any halftoning scheme. We then introduce LUT based halftoning and tree-structured LUT (TLUT)halftoning. We demonstrate how halftone image quality in between that of error diffusion and Direct Binary Search (DBS)can be achieved depending on the size of tree structure in TLUT algorithm while keeping the complexity of the algorithm much lower than that of DBS
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