Title :
Exploring texture ensembles by efficient Markov chain Monte Carlo-Toward a “trichromacy” theory of texture
Author :
Zhu, Song Chun ; Liu, Xiu Wen ; Wu, Ying Nian
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. & Inf. Sci., Ohio State Univ., Columbus, OH, USA
fDate :
6/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Presents a mathematical definition of texture, the Julesz ensemble Ω(h), which is the set of all images (defined on Z2) that share identical statistics h. Then texture modeling is posed as an inverse problem: Given a set of images sampled from an unknown Ω(h *), we search for the statistics h* which define the ensemble. A Ω(h) has an associated probability distribution q(I; h), which is uniform over the images in Ω(h) and has zero probability outside. The authors previously (1999) showed q(I; h) to be the limit distribution of the FRAME (filter, random field, and minimax entropy) model, as the image lattice Λ→Z2. This conclusion establishes the intrinsic link between the scientific definition of texture on Z2 and the mathematical models of texture on finite lattices. It brings two advantages: the practice of texture image synthesis by matching statistics is put on a mathematical foundation; and we need not learn the expensive FRAME model in feature pursuit, model selection and texture synthesis. An efficient Markov chain Monte Carte algorithm is proposed for sampling Julesz ensembles. It generates random texture images by moving along the directions of filter coefficients and, thus, extends the traditional single site Gibbs sampler. We compare four popular statistical measures in the literature, in terms of their descriptive abilities. Our experiments suggest that a small number of bins in marginal histograms are sufficient for capturing a variety of texture patterns
Keywords :
Markov processes; Monte Carlo methods; filtering theory; image texture; minimax techniques; FRAME model; Julesz ensemble; efficient Markov chain Monte Carlo method; feature pursuit; filter model; finite lattices; image lattice; minimax entropy model; model selection; random field model; single site Gibbs sampler; texture ensembles; texture image synthesis; texture synthesis; trichromacy theory; Entropy; Filters; Image generation; Inverse problems; Lattices; Mathematical model; Minimax techniques; Probability distribution; Statistical distributions; Statistics;
Journal_Title :
Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, IEEE Transactions on