Title :
M-lattice: a novel non-linear dynamical system and its application to halftoning
Author :
Sherstinsky, Alex ; Picard, Rosalind W.
Author_Institution :
Media Lab., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
This paper presents a novel non-linear dynamical system called the “M-lattice system”. This system is rooted in the reaction-diffusion model, first proposed be Turing in 1952 to explain the formation of animal patterns such as zebra stripes and leopard spots. The M-lattice system is closely related to the analog Hopfield network and the cellular neural network, but has more flexibility in how its variables interact. In particular, the model is well-suited to a variety of applications formulated as constrained nonlinear optimization. The present study demonstrates the use of this model for two different image halftoning examples. The first example synthesizes a halftone of Einstein in the “hand-drawn” style of the Wall Street Journal portraits; it illustrates how a more flexible quality metric can be used when the binary requirement is stated as an explicit constraint. The second example synthesizes halftones free of correlated artifacts; it illustrates the noise-shaping capability of the M-lattice system
Keywords :
image processing; nonlinear dynamical systems; nonlinear programming; optimisation; Einstein; M-lattice system; Wall Street Journal portraits; analog Hopfield network; animal patterns; binary requirement; cellular neural network; constrained nonlinear optimization; halftoning; image halftoning; leopard spots; noise-shaping; non-linear dynamical system; nonlinear program; quality metric; reaction-diffusion model; zebra stripes; Animals; Biological system modeling; Constraint optimization; Hopfield neural networks; Laboratories; Network synthesis; Neural networks; Noise shaping; Nonlinear equations; Pattern formation;
Conference_Titel :
Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, 1994. ICASSP-94., 1994 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Adelaide, SA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-1775-0
DOI :
10.1109/ICASSP.1994.389593