Title :
Edge and line detection as exercises in hypothesis testing
Author_Institution :
Intelligence, Surveillance & Reconnaissance Div., Defence Sci. & Technol. Organ., Edinburgh, SA, Australia
Abstract :
In the standard paradigm for edge or line detection matched filters are used to test for the presence of a specified structure. Longer lines are then produced by linking detections; broader lines by filtering at larger scales. The paper proposes an alternative approach based on characterising general linear features as lines along which the distribution of pixel values and/or pixel differences is significantly different from their distribution in the image as a whole. Detection then becomes an exercise in testing the hypothesis that the two distributions are different. For Gaussian distributions the test reduces to computing one or more Radon transforms. Issues of length and scale are now addressed by multiresolution methods: multiresolution implementations of the Radon transform naturally construct longer lines as unions of shorter ones, while broader lines are detected by applying the detection process to the coefficients in each level of a wavelet decomposition of the image.
Keywords :
Gaussian distribution; Radon transforms; edge detection; feature extraction; image resolution; matched filters; wavelet transforms; Gaussian distribution; Radon transform; edge-line detection matched filter; hypothesis testing; linear feature; multiresolution method; pixel value distribution; wavelet image decomposition; Distributed computing; Filtering; Gaussian distribution; Image edge detection; Image resolution; Joining processes; Matched filters; Pixel; Testing; Wavelet transforms;
Conference_Titel :
Image Processing, 2004. ICIP '04. 2004 International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8554-3
DOI :
10.1109/ICIP.2004.1421657