We describe and test a biologically motivated space-variant filtering method for decreasing the noise in optic flow fields. Our filter model adopts certain properties of a particular motion-sensitive area of the brain (area MT), which averages the incoming motion signals over receptive fields, the sizes of which increase with the distance from the center of the projection. We use heading estimation from optic flow as a criterion to evaluate the improvement of the filtered flow field. The tests are conducted on flow fields calculated with a standard flow algorithm from image sequences. We use two different sets of image sequences. The first set is recorded by a camera which is installed in a moving car. The second set is derived from a database containing three dimensional data and reflectance information from natural scenes. The latter set guarantees full control of the camera motion and ground truth about the flow field and the heading. We test the space-variant filtering method by comparing heading estimation results between space-variant filtered flow, flow filtered by averaging over domains of the visual field with constant size (constant filtering) and raw unfiltered flow. Because of noise and the aperture problem the heading estimates obtained from the raw flows are often unreliable. Estimated heading differs widely for different sub-sampled calculations. In contrast, the results obtained from the filtered flows are much less variable and therefore more consistent. Furthermore, we find a significant improvement of the results obtained from the space-variant filtered flow compared to the constant filtered flow. We suggest extensions to the space-variant filtering procedure that take other properties of motion representation in area MT into account.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09548980600563962 | DOI Listing |
Photoacoustics
September 2020
Institute for Biological and Medical Imaging, Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich, Neuherberg, 85764, Germany.
The fidelity and quality of reconstructed images in optoacoustic mesoscopy (OPAM) can be significantly improved by considering the spatial impulse response (SIR) of the employed focused transducer into reconstruction. However, the traditional method fully taking the SIR into account can hardly meet the data-intensive requirements of high resolution OPAM because of excessive memory and time consumption. Herein, a modified back-projection method using a space-variant filter for full-frequency correction of the SIR is presented, and applied to the OPAM system with a sphere-focused transducer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Imaging
February 2020
Istituto di Biofisica, CNR, Via Moruzzi 1, 56124 Pisa, Italy.
An impossible structure gives us the impression of looking at a three-dimensional object, even though this object cannot exist, since it possesses parts that are spatially non-connectable, and are characterized by misleading geometrical properties not instantly evident. Therefore, impossible artworks appeal to our intellect and challenge our perceptive capacities. We analyzed lithographs containing impossible structures (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA target-recognition method for retina-like laser detection and range images is proposed. A log-polar (LP) frequency descriptor (LPHFM) is constructed using Fourier-Mellin transformation combined with a high-pass filter for LP range images. The target-recognition result can be obtained via the maximum energy from the phase correlation spectrum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Med Biol
September 2017
Department of Imaging Physics, Delft University of Technology, Lorentzweg 1, 2628 CJ Delft, Netherlands.
As a result of the shallow depth of focus of the optical imaging system, the use of standard filtered back projection in optical projection tomography causes space-variant tangential blurring that increases with the distance to the rotation axis. We present a novel optical tomographic image reconstruction technique that incorporates the point spread function of the imaging lens in an iterative reconstruction. The technique is demonstrated using numerical simulations, tested on experimental optical projection tomography data of single fluorescent beads, and applied to high-resolution emission optical projection tomography imaging of an entire zebrafish larva.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComput Anal Images Patterns
July 2017
University of Seville, Spain.
This is an experimental paper in which we introduce the possibility to analyze and to synthesize 3D medical images by using multi-variate Gabor frames with Gaussian windows. Our purpose is to apply a space-variant filter-like operation in the space-frequency domain to correct medical images corrupted by different types of acquisitions errors. The Gabor frames are constructed with Gaussian windows sampled on non-separable lattices for a better packing of the space-frequency plane.
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