Publications by authors named "J Zujovic"

Article Synopsis
  • The study presents a systematic method for developing and evaluating structural texture similarity metrics (STSIMs) aimed at enhancing lossless image compression through texture redundancy.
  • It utilizes a set of distortions resembling natural image perturbations to assess how similar original and altered textures appear to observers.
  • The findings reveal that the trained STSIM metrics show notable performance improvements and can compete with advanced convolutional neural network metrics, while being more computationally efficient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ketamine as an old-new drug has a variety of clinical implications. In the last 30 years, ketamine has become popular for acute use in humans. Ketamine in standard doses is principally utilized for the induction and maintenance of surgical procedures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Stathmin1 is a microtubular regulatory protein. The expression disorders of this protein result in significant changes in cell migration, invasion, adhesion and colony formation in many malignant tumors. The aim of our research was to investigate the effects of Stathmin1 expression on neoangiogenesis in colorectal adenocarcinoma.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The development and testing of objective texture similarity metrics that agree with human judgments of texture similarity require, in general, extensive subjective tests. The effectiveness and efficiency of such tests depend on a careful analysis of the abilities of human perception and the application requirements. The focus of this paper is on defining performance requirements and testing procedures for objective texture similarity metrics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We develop new metrics for texture similarity that accounts for human visual perception and the stochastic nature of textures. The metrics rely entirely on local image statistics and allow substantial point-by-point deviations between textures that according to human judgment are essentially identical. The proposed metrics extend the ideas of structural similarity and are guided by research in texture analysis-synthesis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF