Soft computing techniques have shown much potential in a variety of computer vision and image analysis tasks. In this paper, an overview of recent soft computing approaches to the colour quantisation problem is presented. Colour quantisation is a common image processing technique to reduce the number of distinct colours in an image. Those selected colours form a colour palette, while the resulting image quality is directly determined by the choice of colours in the palette. The use of generic optimisation techniques such as simulated annealing and soft computing-based clustering algorithms founded on fuzzy and rough set ideas to formulate colour quantisation algorithms is discussed. These methods are capable of deriving good colour palettes and are shown to outperform standard colour quantisation techniques in terms of image quality. Furthermore, a hybrid colour quantisation algorithm which combines a generic optimisation approach with a common clustering algorithm is shown to lead to improved image quality. Finally, it is demonstrated how optimisation-based colour quantisation can be employed in conjunction with a more appropriate measure for image quality.
CITATION STYLE
Schaefer, G. (2014). Soft computing-based colour quantisation. EURASIP Journal on Image and Video Processing, 2014(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1687-5281-2014-8
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