Author/Authors :
Mann، نويسنده , , S.
، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
It is argued that, hidden within the flow of signals
from typical cameras, through image processing, to display media,
is a homomorphic filter. While homomorphic filtering is often desirable,
there are some occasions where it is not. Thus, cancellation
of this implicit homomorphic filter is proposed, through the introduction
of an antihomomorphic filter. This concept gives rise to
the principle of quantigraphic image processing, wherein it is argued
that most cameras can be modeled as an array of idealized
light meters each linearly responsive to a semi-monotonic function
of the quantity of light received, integrated over a fixed spectral
response profile. This quantity is neither radiometric nor photometric,
but, rather, depends only on the spectral response of the
sensor elements in the camera. A particular class of functional
equations, called comparametric equations, is introduced as a basis
for quantigraphic image processing. Comparametric equations are
fundamental to the analysis and processing of multiple images differing
only in exposure. The well-known “gamma correction” of
an image is presented as a simple example of a comparametric
equation, for which it is shown that the underlying quantigraphic
function does not pass through the origin. For this reason it is argued
that exposure adjustment by gamma correction is inherently
flawed, and alternatives are provided. These alternatives, when applied
to a plurality of images that differ only in exposure, give rise
to a new kind of processing in the “amplitude domain” (as opposed
to the time domain or the frequency domain). While the theoretical
framework presented in this paper originated within the field
of wearable cybernetics (wearable photographic apparatus) in the
1970s and early 1980s, it is applicable to the processing of images
from nearly all types of modern cameras, wearable or otherwise.
This paper is a much revised draft of a 1992 peer-reviewed but
unpublished report by the author, entitled “Lightspace and the
Wyckoff principle.”
Keywords :
image processing , photography , quantigraphic imaging , Wyckoff principle. , wearable cybernetics , lightspace , Comparametric equation , comparametric plot , personal imaging