Paper
13 December 1976 Detection And Coding Of Edges Using Directional Masks
Guner S. Robinson
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
This paper describes a new image coding system which combines the detection and coding of visually significant edges in natural images. The edges are defined as amplitude discontinuities between different regions of an image. The edge detection system makes use of 3 x 3 masks, which are well suited for digital implementation. Edge angles are quantized to eight equally spaced directions, suitable for chain coding of contours. Use of an edge direction map improves the simple thresholding of gradient modulus images. The concept of local connectivity of the edge direction map is useful in improving the performance of this method as well as other edge operators such as Kirsch and Sobel. The concepts of an "edge activity index" and a "locally adaptive threshold" are introduced and shown to improve the performance even further.
© (1976) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Guner S. Robinson "Detection And Coding Of Edges Using Directional Masks", Proc. SPIE 0087, Advances in Image Transmission Techniques, (13 December 1976); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.954985
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CITATIONS
Cited by 26 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Analog electronics

Edge detection

Image transmission

Image compression

Visualization

Binary data

Image quality

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