Paper
13 December 1976 An Annihilation Transform Compression Method For Permuted Images
Robert M. Haralick, Norman C. Griswold, Craig A. Paul
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In the usual transform compression encoding schemes, an image is divided into regular shaped subimages or blocks, a transform is performed on each block, low energy components thrown away, remaining components encoded and transmitted, and then the received image reconstructed. This paper discusses ways in which the image pixels can be permuted before the image is blocked and a special annihilation transform technique to perform the image coding. Experimental results show the compressed images to have no blocking effects, but a more mottled appearance compared to a discrete cosine transform coding method. The annihilation method on permuted images not only gives reconstructed images better visual quality, but also gives lower RMS error.
© (1976) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Robert M. Haralick, Norman C. Griswold, and Craig A. Paul "An Annihilation Transform Compression Method For Permuted Images", Proc. SPIE 0087, Advances in Image Transmission Techniques, (13 December 1976); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.954995
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KEYWORDS
Image compression

Image transmission

Image resolution

Visualization

Image quality

Unmanned aerial vehicles

Computer programming

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