DocumentCode :
3168494
Title :
Achieving brightness-insensitive measurements of colour saturation for use in object recognition
Author :
Pritchard, A.I. ; Horne, R.E.N. ; Sangwine, S.J.
Author_Institution :
Reading Univ., UK
fYear :
1995
fDate :
4-6 Jul 1995
Firstpage :
791
Lastpage :
795
Abstract :
Object recognition using colour images has great potential due to the greater information content of colour images compared with monochrome and the falling cost of colour hardware. One particular advantage of colour processing in object recognition is the potential to eliminate segmentation problems caused by shadow, on the assumption that the colour properties of an object are independent of the illumination intensity. However, there are difficulties with colour which the authors have been researching. In particular, the elimination of colour variation due to shadows requires correct colorimetric camera calibration and a colour pixel representation which separates the colour properties from the brightness. The traditional hue and saturation representation has been studied, and although it is possible for hue to be made brightness invariant by correct camera calibration, an equivalent brightness invariance of saturation is much more difficult to achieve. In this paper we present an alternative measure of depth of colour which we call colour purity. We define colour purity, Pc , as follows: Pc=r+g+b- 3.min(r,g,b). This quantity is easily computed and exhibits greater brightness invariance than traditional saturation in some circumstances. Use of colour purity can facilitate segmentation of colour images using colour properties and cluster analysis. Specifically, its potential to limit the effects of quantisation noise in colour image processing is described
Keywords :
brightness; calibration; colorimetry; image colour analysis; image representation; image segmentation; object recognition; brightness invariance; brightness-insensitive measurements; cluster analysis; colorimetric camera calibration; colour depth measurement; colour hardware; colour image processing; colour pixel representation; colour properties; colour purity; colour saturation; colour variation; hue; illumination intensity; image segmentation; information content; object recognition; quantisation noise; saturation; shadows;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
iet
Conference_Titel :
Image Processing and its Applications, 1995., Fifth International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Edinburgh
Print_ISBN :
0-85296-642-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1049/cp:19950768
Filename :
465635
Link To Document :
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