Title :
Splines: A perfect fit for signal processing
Author_Institution :
Biomedical Imaging Group, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne EPFL, Switzerland
Abstract :
Splines, which were invented by Schoenberg more than fifty years ago [1], constitute an elegant framework for dealing with interpolation and discretization problems. They are widely used in computer-aided design and computer graphics, but have been neglected in signal and image processing applications, mostly as a consequence of what I call the “bad press” phenomenon. Thanks to some recent research efforts in signal processing and wavelet-related techniques, the virtues of splines have been revived in our community [2] — there is now compelling evidence (several independent studies [3-5]) that splines offer the best cost-performance tradeoff among available interpolation methods.
Keywords :
Biomedical imaging; Image processing; Interpolation; Least squares approximations; Presses; Signal processing; Splines (mathematics);
Conference_Titel :
Signal Processing Conference, 2000 10th European
Conference_Location :
Tampere, Finland
Print_ISBN :
978-952-1504-43-3