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Journal ArticleDOI

Contrast in complex images.

Eli Peli
- 01 Oct 1990 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 10, pp 2032-2040
TLDR
A definition of local band-limited contrast in images is proposed that assigns a contrast value to every point in the image as a function of the spatial frequency band and is helpful in understanding the effects of image-processing algorithms on the perceived contrast.
Abstract
The physical contrast of simple images such as sinusoidal gratings or a single patch of light on a uniform background is well defined and agrees with the perceived contrast, but this is not so for complex images. Most definitions assign a single contrast value to the whole image, but perceived contrast may vary greatly across the image. Human contrast sensitivity is a function of spatial frequency; therefore the spatial frequency content of an image should be considered in the definition of contrast. In this paper a definition of local band-limited contrast in images is proposed that assigns a contrast value to every point in the image as a function of the spatial frequency band. For each frequency band, the contrast is defined as the ratio of the bandpass-filtered image at the frequency to the low-pass image filtered to an octave below the same frequency (local luminance mean). This definition raises important implications regarding the perception of contrast in complex images and is helpful in understanding the effects of image-processing algorithms on the perceived contrast. A pyramidal image-contrast structure based on this definition is useful in simulating nonlinear, threshold characteristics of spatial vision in both normal observers and the visually impaired.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Contrast Enhancement from Multiple Panoramic Images

TL;DR: An efficient strategy for combining multiple panoramic scans of the same scene to create a single higher contrast image is discussed, and steps to improve results using modified contrast measures for color images are described.
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Normative theory of visual receptive fields.

TL;DR: In this article, a normative computational theory of visual receptive fields is presented, by which idealized shapes of early spatial, spatio-chromatic and spatiotemporal receptive fields can be represented.
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An evolutionary computation based algorithm for calculating solar differential rotation by automatic tracking of coronal bright points

TL;DR: A prototype of a modular framework for solar feature detection, characterization, and tracking, and the application of the PSO-Snake algorithm for calculating the sidereal rotational angular velocity of the solar corona is discussed.
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Contrast sensitivity in images of natural scenes

TL;DR: It is found that the iCSF varies with pictorial content, but that the standard CSF model and the image’s contrast spectrums are sufficient to predict with relative success the cCSF for any given image.

Learning Nonlinear Visual Processing from Natural Images

TL;DR: It is empirically demonstrated that luminance and contrast are strongly dependent in natural images, contradicting previous theories suggesting that luminances and contrast were processed separately in natural systems due to their independence in the visual data.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Relations between the statistics of natural images and the response properties of cortical cells.

TL;DR: The results obtained with six natural images suggest that the orientation and the spatial-frequency tuning of mammalian simple cells are well suited for coding the information in such images if the goal of the code is to convert higher-order redundancy into first- order redundancy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial frequency selectivity of cells in macaque visual cortex

TL;DR: Among other things, it is shown that many stirate cells have quite narrow spatial bandwidths and at a given retinal eccentricity, the distribution of peak frequency covers a wide range of frequencies; these findings support the basic multiple channel notion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Feature Detection in Human Vision: A Phase-Dependent Energy Model

TL;DR: A simple and biologically plausible model of how mammalian visual systems could detect and identify features in an image is presented and it is suggested that the points in a waveform that have unique perceptual significance as ‘lines’ and ‘edges’ are the points where the Fourier components of the waveform come into phase with each other.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contrast constancy: deblurring in human vision by spatial frequency channels.

TL;DR: It is argued that spatial frequency channels in the visual cortex are organized to compensate for earlier attenuation, and achieves a dramatic 'deblurring' of the image, and optimizes the clarity of vision.
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