9,262 research outputs found

    Rotation and Scale Invariant Texture Classification

    Get PDF
    Texture classification is very important in image analysis. Content based image retrieval, inspection of surfaces, object recognition by texture, document segmentation are few examples where texture classification plays a major role. Classification of texture images, especially those with different orientation and scale changes, is a challenging and important problem in image analysis and classification. This thesis proposes an effective scheme for rotation and scale invariant texture classification. The rotation and scale invariant feature extraction for a given image involves applying a log-polar transform to eliminate the rotation and scale effects, but at same time produce a row shifted log-polar image, which is then passed to an adaptive row shift invariant wavelet packet transform to eliminate the row shift effects. So, the output wavelet coefficients are rotation and scale invariant. The adaptive row shift invariant wavelet packet transform is quite efficient with only O (n*log n) complexity. The experimental results, based on different testing data sets for images from Brodatz album with different orientations and scales, show that the implemented classification scheme outperforms other texture classification methods, its overall accuracy rate for joint rotation and scale invariance being 87.09 percent

    A HIERARCHICAL APPROACH TO ROTATION-INVARIANT TEXTURE FEATURE EXTRACTION BASED ON RADON TRANSFORM PARAMETERS

    Get PDF
    ABSTRACT In this paper, we propose an efficient hierarchical method for extracting invariant texture features using the Gabor wavelets and Radon transform parameters. The proposed method applies the Radon transform to estimate the directional information in the highband texture image extracted by Gabor wavelets. The directional information is then used to make the texture feature invariant to rotation. To show the efficiency of our scheme, we developed a texture-based image retrieval system based on the proposed method and evaluated it on a set of images from the Brodatz album. Experimental results show that the proposed system outperforms previous rotation-invariant systems significantly

    Sabanci-Okan system at ImageClef 2011: plant identication task

    Get PDF
    We describe our participation in the plant identication task of ImageClef 2011. Our approach employs a variety of texture, shape as well as color descriptors. Due to the morphometric properties of plants, mathematical morphology has been advocated as the main methodology for texture characterization, supported by a multitude of contour-based shape and color features. We submitted a single run, where the focus has been almost exclusively on scan and scan-like images, due primarily to lack of time. Moreover, special care has been taken to obtain a fully automatic system, operating only on image data. While our photo results are low, we consider our submission successful, since besides being our rst attempt, our accuracy is the highest when considering the average of the scan and scan-like results, upon which we had concentrated our eorts

    Rotationally invariant texture based features

    Get PDF

    Plant image retrieval using color, shape and texture features

    Get PDF
    We present a content-based image retrieval system for plant image retrieval, intended especially for the house plant identification problem. A plant image consists of a collection of overlapping leaves and possibly flowers, which makes the problem challenging.We studied the suitability of various well-known color, shape and texture features for this problem, as well as introducing some new texture matching techniques and shape features. Feature extraction is applied after segmenting the plant region from the background using the max-flow min-cut technique. Results on a database of 380 plant images belonging to 78 different types of plants show promise of the proposed new techniques and the overall system: in 55% of the queries, the correct plant image is retrieved among the top-15 results. Furthermore, the accuracy goes up to 73% when a 132-image subset of well-segmented plant images are considered
    corecore