Connectivity preserving transformations for higher dimensional binary images

Abstract

AbstractAn N-dimensional digital binary image (I) is a function I:ZN→{0,1}. I is B3N−1,W3N−1 connected if and only if its black pixels and white pixels are each (3N−1)-connected. I is only B3N−1 connected if and only if its black pixels are (3N−1)-connected. For a 3-D binary image, the respective connectivity models are B26,W26 and B26. A pair of (3N−1)-neighboring opposite-valued pixels is called interchangeable in a N-D binary image I, if reversing their values preserves the original connectedness. We call such an interchange to be a (3N−1)-local interchange. Under the above connectivity models, we show that given two binary images of n pixels/voxels each, we can transform one to the other using a sequence of (3N−1)-local interchanges. The specific results are as follows. Any two B26-connected 3-dimensional images I and J each having n black voxels are transformable using a sequence of O((c1+c2)n2) 26-local interchanges. Here, c1 and c2 are the total number of 8-connected components in all 2-dimensional layers of I and J respectively. We also show bounds on B26 connectivity under a different interchange model as proposed in [A. Dumitrescu, J. Pach, Pushing squares around, Graphs and Combinatorics 22 (1) (2006) 37–50]. Next, we show that any two simply connected images under the B26, W26 connectivity model and each having n black voxels are transformable using a sequence of O(n2) 26-local interchanges. We generalize this result to show that any two B3N−1, W3N−1-connected N-dimensional simply connected images each having n black pixels are transformable using a sequence of O(Nn2)(3N−1)-local interchanges, where N>1

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