Paper
30 October 1975 Pictorial Information Transmission Through Simulation
Robert T. P. Wang
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In an age when man is inundated with information, his natural ability to selectively assimilate the data presented to him has become an indispensible tool for survival. By the same token, man's visual perception limitations have been used to reduce the amount of data needed to reproduce pictorial information designed for his consumption. A comparative study of two divergent approaches to the problem of providing an optimum amount of video information to a human viewer is discussed. Video communication systems exemplify one area where the approach consists of reducing the data from real world scenes by video data compression algorithms. The opposite approach is found in visual simulators where scenes are constructed synthetically to approach real world realism by adding cues to the basic structure of the digital image representation used. Such simulators are used in groundbased trainers designed to reduce the cost of training operators of expensive equipment. In both situations there is a need to provide realistic video to a human observer. In the quest for optimum pictorial information transmission, simulated scenes are shown to provide some rather unusual, hitherto unexplored, insights and alternatives.
© (1975) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Robert T. P. Wang "Pictorial Information Transmission Through Simulation", Proc. SPIE 0066, Efficient Transmission of Pictorial Information, (30 October 1975); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.965367
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Visualization

Video

Eye

Data compression

Video compression

Computer simulations

Receivers

RELATED CONTENT

Video compression via log polar mapping
Proceedings of SPIE (September 01 1990)
Design of a reading test for low-vision image warping
Proceedings of SPIE (August 27 1993)
RPV Video Communications A New Challenge To Video Data...
Proceedings of SPIE (December 13 1976)
Global brightness-fluctuation compensation in video coding
Proceedings of SPIE (January 10 1997)
Fast motion compensated temporal interpolation for video
Proceedings of SPIE (April 21 1995)

Back to Top