1 August 1994 Gray-scale morphological granulometric texture classification
Yidong Chen, Edward R. Dougherty
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Binary morphological granulometric size distributions were conceived by Matheron as a way of describing image granularity (or texture). Since each normalized size distribution is a probability density, feature vectors of granulometric moments result. Recent application has focused on taking local size distributions around individual pixels so that the latter can be classified by surrounding texture. The extension of the local-classification technique to gray-scale textures is investigated. It does so by using 42 granulometric features, half generated by opening granulometries and a dual half generated by closing granulometries. After training and classification of both dependent and independent data, feature extraction (compression) is accomplished by means of the Karhunen-Loeve transform. Sequential feature selection is also applied. The effect of randomly placed uniform noise is investigated. In particular, the degree to which training in noise increases robustness across noise levels is studied, and feature selection is employed to arrive at a noise-insensitive set of granulometric classifiers.
Yidong Chen and Edward R. Dougherty "Gray-scale morphological granulometric texture classification," Optical Engineering 33(8), (1 August 1994). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.173552
Published: 1 August 1994
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Cited by 106 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image classification

Binary data

Feature extraction

Feature selection

Image segmentation

Signal to noise ratio

Library classification systems

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