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Journal ArticleDOI

Theory of Edge Detection

TLDR
The theory of edge detection explains several basic psychophysical findings, and the operation of forming oriented zero-crossing segments from the output of centre-surround ∇2G filters acting on the image forms the basis for a physiological model of simple cells.
Abstract
A theory of edge detection is presented. The analysis proceeds in two parts. (1) Intensity changes, which occur in a natural image over a wide range of scales, are detected separately at different scales. An appropriate filter for this purpose at a given scale is found to be the second derivative of a Gaussian, and it is shown that, provided some simple conditions are satisfied, these primary filters need not be orientation-dependent. Thus, intensity changes at a given scale are best detected by finding the zero values of delta 2G(x,y)*I(x,y) for image I, where G(x,y) is a two-dimensional Gaussian distribution and delta 2 is the Laplacian. The intensity changes thus discovered in each of the channels are then represented by oriented primitives called zero-crossing segments, and evidence is given that this representation is complete. (2) Intensity changes in images arise from surface discontinuities or from reflectance or illumination boundaries, and these all have the property that they are spatially. Because of this, the zero-crossing segments from the different channels are not independent, and rules are deduced for combining them into a description of the image. This description is called the raw primal sketch. The theory explains several basic psychophysical findings, and the operation of forming oriented zero-crossing segments from the output of centre-surround delta 2G filters acting on the image forms the basis for a physiological model of simple cells (see Marr & Ullman 1979).

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Computational Approach to Edge Detection

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Book ChapterDOI

SURF: speeded up robust features

TL;DR: A novel scale- and rotation-invariant interest point detector and descriptor, coined SURF (Speeded Up Robust Features), which approximates or even outperforms previously proposed schemes with respect to repeatability, distinctiveness, and robustness, yet can be computed and compared much faster.
Journal ArticleDOI

Image registration methods: a survey

TL;DR: A review of recent as well as classic image registration methods to provide a comprehensive reference source for the researchers involved in image registration, regardless of particular application areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contour Detection and Hierarchical Image Segmentation

TL;DR: This paper investigates two fundamental problems in computer vision: contour detection and image segmentation and presents state-of-the-art algorithms for both of these tasks.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Line length detectors in the human visual system: Evidence from selective adaptation

TL;DR: This paper found that the contrast thresholds for a short-line test grating were relatively higher if the subject had previously viewed a high-contrast grating with short lines of equal length to the test grates than if they viewed an adapting grating having longer lines, consistent with the view that there are detectors sensitive to line length in the human visual system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual adaptation to patterns containing two-dimensional spatial structure

TL;DR: It is shown that the threshold elevation effect is selective for the length of bars in the gratings, the maximum effect occurring when the bar length in the adaptation grating is the same as that in the test grating.

Directional selectivity and its use in early visual processing

TL;DR: In this article, the construction of directionally selective units, and their use in the processing of visual motion, are considered, and a number of psychophysical and neurophysiological predictions are derived from the theory.
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