Scale-space on image profiles about an object boundary

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Abstract

Traditionally, image blurring by diffusion is done in Euclidean space, in an image-based coordinate system. This will blur edges at object boundaries, making segmentation difficult. Geometry-driven diffusion [1] uses a geometric model to steer the blurring, so as to blur along the boundary (to overcome noise) but edge-detect across the object boundary. In this paper, we present a scale-space on image profiles taken about the object boundary, in an object-intrinsic coordinate system. The profiles are sampled from the image in the fashion of Active Shape Models [2], and a scale-space is constructed on the profiles, where diffusion is run only in directions tangent to the boundary. Features from the scale-space are then used to build a statistical model of the image structure about the boundary, trained on a population of images with corresponding geometric models. This statistical image match model can be used in an image segmentation framework. Results are shown in 2D on synthetic and real-world objects; the methods can also be extended to 3D. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2003.

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APA

Ho, S., & Gerig, G. (2003). Scale-space on image profiles about an object boundary. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Including Subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics), 2695, 564–575. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-44935-3_39

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