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Derivatives of Inverse Trigonometric Functions

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Related Experiment Video

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Digital Inline Holographic Microscopy (DIHM) of Weakly-scattering Subjects
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Optimized halftoning using dot diffusion and methods for inverse halftoning.

M Mese1, P P Vaidyanathan

  • 1Dept. of Electr. Eng., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA 91125, USA. mese@systems.caltech.edu

IEEE Transactions on Image Processing : a Publication of the IEEE Signal Processing Society
|February 8, 2008
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Dot diffusion for digital halftoning achieves pixel-level parallelism. Optimizing its class matrix, considering human vision, yields image quality comparable to error diffusion without sacrificing speed.

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Area of Science:

  • Digital imaging
  • Computer vision
  • Image processing

Background:

  • Error diffusion (ED) is a benchmark for digital halftoning image quality.
  • Dot diffusion (DD) offers pixel-level parallelism but generally lower image quality than ED.
  • Existing methods struggle to balance speed and quality in digital halftoning.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To enhance dot diffusion (DD) image quality to rival error diffusion (ED).
  • To introduce adaptive dot diffusion and derive its mathematical description.
  • To explore inverse halftoning techniques for dot diffused images.

Main Methods:

  • Optimization of the dot diffusion class matrix by incorporating human visual characteristics.
  • Development of adaptive dot diffusion algorithms.
  • Mathematical modeling of the dot diffusion process.
  • Inverse halftoning using Projection Onto Convex Sets (POCS) and wavelet-based methods.

Main Results:

  • Optimized dot diffusion achieves image quality comparable to error diffusion.
  • Pixel-level parallelism is maintained, unlike traditional error diffusion.
  • Wavelet-based inverse halftoning is effective without requiring class matrix knowledge.
  • Embedded multiresolution dot diffusion enables progressive image transmission and rendering.

Conclusions:

  • Class matrix optimization significantly improves dot diffusion performance.
  • Adaptive dot diffusion offers a viable alternative to error diffusion for high-quality, parallelizable halftoning.
  • Advanced inverse halftoning techniques provide effective solutions for reconstructing images from dot diffused outputs.