Abstract :
Edges, corners, and vertices in an image correspond to 1D (one-dimensional) and 2D discontinuities in the intensity surface of the underlying scene. Ridges and peaks correspond to 1D and 2D extrema in it. All of them can be characterized by the distribution of gradients, particularly by the dimensionality of it. The approach to image field categorization here is to construct a covariance matrix of the gradient vector in each small window and apply the canonical correlation analysis to it. Schwarz´s inequality on the matrix determinant and the related differential equation is the key to this analysis. We obtain two operators PEG and QEG to categorize the image field into a unidirectionally varying region (UNIVAR), an omidirectionally varying region (OMNIVAR), and a nonvarying region. We investigate the conditions under which their absolute maximum response, i.e. PEG=1 and QEG=1, occurs in the small window and show that they are, respectively, the desired 1D and 2D discontinuities/extrema and OMNIVAR, is in many cases, a 1D pattern in polar coordinates. This leads to an algorithm to obtain further classification and accurate localization of them into edges, ridges, peaks, corners, and vertices through detailed analysis in the informative (varying) axis of them. We examined and compared the performance of the operators and the localization algorithm on various types of images and various noise levels. The results indicate that the proposed method is superior with respect to stability, localization, and resolution
Keywords :
Gaussian noise; covariance matrices; eigenvalues and eigenfunctions; feature extraction; filtering theory; 1D discontinuities; 1D extrema; 1D pattern; 2D discontinuities; 2D extrema; PEG operator; QEG operator; Schwarz´s inequality; absolute maximum response; canonical correlation analysis; corner detection; edge detection; gradient covariance; image field categorization; intensity surface; localization; matrix determinant; nonvarying region; omidirectionally varying region; polar coordinates; resolution; unidirectionally varying region; Computer vision; Covariance matrix; Detectors; Face detection; Feature extraction; Filters; Image analysis; Image edge detection; Layout; Surface fitting;