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Journal ArticleDOI

Integrating region growing and edge detection

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TLDR
A method that combines region growing and edge detection for image segmentation is presented and is thought that the success in the tool images is because the objects shown occupy areas of many pixels, making it is easy to select parameters to separate signal information from noise.
Abstract
A method that combines region growing and edge detection for image segmentation is presented. The authors start with a split-and merge algorithm wherein the parameters have been set up so that an over-segmented image results. Region boundaries are then eliminated or modified on the basis of criteria that integrate contrast with boundary smoothness, variation of the image gradient along the boundary, and a criterion that penalizes for the presence of artifacts reflecting the data structure used during segmentation (quadtree in this case). The algorithms were implemented in the C language on a Sun 3/160 workstation running under the Unix operating system. Simple tool images and aerial photographs were used to test the algorithms. The impression of human observers is that the method is very successful on the tool images and less so on the aerial photograph images. It is thought that the success in the tool images is because the objects shown occupy areas of many pixels, making it is easy to select parameters to separate signal information from noise. >

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Journal ArticleDOI

Seeded region growing

TL;DR: This correspondence presents a new algorithm for segmentation of intensity images which is robust, rapid, and free of tuning parameters, and suggests two ways in which it can be employed, namely, by using manual seed selection or by automated procedures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Color image segmentation: advances and prospects

TL;DR: This survey provides a summary of color image segmentation techniques available now based on monochrome segmentation approaches operating in different color spaces and some novel approaches such as fuzzy method and physics-based method are investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid image segmentation using watersheds and fast region merging

TL;DR: A hybrid multidimensional image segmentation algorithm is proposed, which combines edge and region-based techniques through the morphological algorithm of watersheds and additionally maintains the so-called nearest neighbor graph, due to which the priority queue size and processing time are drastically reduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Automatic image segmentation by integrating color-edge extraction and seeded region growing

TL;DR: In this article, color edges in an image are first obtained automatically by combining an improved isotropic edge detector and a fast entropic thresholding technique, and the centroids between these adjacent edge regions are taken as the initial seeds for seeded region growing (SRG), these seeds are then replaced by the generated homogeneous image regions by incorporating the required additional pixels step by step.
Book ChapterDOI

Yet Another Survey on Image Segmentation: Region and Boundary Information Integration

TL;DR: This paper reviews different segmentation proposals which integrate edge and region information and highlights 7 different strategies and methods to fuse such information.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Snakes : Active Contour Models

TL;DR: This work uses snakes for interactive interpretation, in which user-imposed constraint forces guide the snake near features of interest, and uses scale-space continuation to enlarge the capture region surrounding a feature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smoothing by spline functions. II

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors generalize the results of [4] and modify the algorithm presented there to obtain a better rate of convergence, which is the same as in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extracting Straight Lines

TL;DR: The algorithm appears to be more effective than previous techniques for two key reasons: 1) the gradient orientation is used as the initial organizing criterion prior to the extraction of straight lines, and 2) the global context of the intensity variations associated with a straight line is determined prior to any local decisions about participating edge elements.
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