Paper
11 October 1994 Multiscale shape simplification for object recognition
Peter Forte, Darrel Greenhill
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The outline of an imaged object is usually obtained as a linked list of edge elements (`edgels'). When these edgels are connected, the resulting shape is hardly ever smooth. This is because even when edgels are detected with subpixel accuracy, the spatial and gray level quantization of the original image mans that consecutive edges show random fluctuations in position and orientation. Fluctuations may also occur as a result of noise or natural variation in the object's boundary. Hence to recognize an object it is necessary to represent the boundary at varying scales of resolution in order to extract the underlying shape. High frequencies may be discarded using smoothing filters or by thresholding wavelet transforms. In this paper these approaches are described and contrasted with an alternative approach of the authors' based on term rewriting. In the latter approach the object outline is represented by a sparse array of edgels. Between any two consecutive edgels the path of the object boundary can be reconstructed (by a contour completion algorithm) to within a tolerance given by the current value of the scale space parameter. As this parameter increases, the number of edgels required to define the outline decreases--hence the shape becomes simpler at the cost of increasing approximation.
© (1994) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Peter Forte and Darrel Greenhill "Multiscale shape simplification for object recognition", Proc. SPIE 2303, Wavelet Applications in Signal and Image Processing II, (11 October 1994); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.188791
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Distortion

Reconstruction algorithms

Tolerancing

Object recognition

Smoothing

Edge detection

Gaussian filters

Back to Top