Paper
29 March 1989 Object-Based Segmentation And Color Recognition In Multispectral Images
Michael H. Brill
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
It is difficult to segment an image according to object, for the geometry of lighting and viewing of three-dimensional objects incurs spatial inhomogeneities (highlights, shading, and cast shadows) in the image. However, the bands of a multispectral image can be used to do the segmentation. We start by assuming that the image field for a uniformly colored object is the sum of a small number of terms, each term being the product of a spatial and a spectral part. The physics of the spatial part is intricate, but the spatial part can be factored out to produce several space-invariant fields of numbers within reflectance boundaries. For an image field either from two light sources on a matte surface or from a single light source on a dielectric surface with highlights, the space-invariant quantities characterizing the object are the components of a particular unit vector in color space. The possibility is discussed of an algorithm for estimating the relative spectral reflectance of an object based on its space-invariant image fields.
© (1989) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Michael H. Brill "Object-Based Segmentation And Color Recognition In Multispectral Images", Proc. SPIE 1076, Image Understanding and the Man-Machine Interface II, (29 March 1989); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.952684
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CITATIONS
Cited by 5 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image segmentation

Reflectivity

Light sources

Sensors

Reflection

Image processing algorithms and systems

Dielectrics

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