DocumentCode
1446483
Title
Primitive features by steering, quadrature, and scale
Author
Folsom, Tyler C. ; Pinter, Robert B.
Author_Institution
QUEST Integrated Inc., Kent, WA, USA
Volume
20
Issue
11
fYear
1998
fDate
11/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1161
Lastpage
1173
Abstract
The impulse response of neurons in the visual cortex of the mammalian brain has been known for some time. How to make use of these as filters has led to many hypotheses. The response of a single filter is ambiguous because the result depends on stimulus type, contrast, position, orientation, and scale. We show that a set of quadrature filters at sparse positions can be constructed so that it is possible to disambiguate the 2D responses of the individual filters. Detecting edges is not the goal of the present work; rather, we seek to detect relevant edges. Thus, we make the assumption that at the scale of interest, a local image patch consists predominantly of an edge or a bar. When this patch is processed by five or seven oriented filters, one can compute the exact orientation and centroid position of the feature. When the set of filters is applied at two different scales, it is possible to distinguish edges from ridges and to identify the polarity, intensity, and width. It is also possible to find corners and blobs. These computations are stable under image shifts in position and orientation and can be made to subpixel resolution
Keywords
computational complexity; computer vision; edge detection; filtering theory; stereo image processing; blobs; corners; impulse response; local image patch; mammalian brain; neurons; primitive features; quadrature filters; scale; steering; subpixel resolution; visual cortex; Cameras; Computer vision; Gabor filters; Image edge detection; Image resolution; Neurons; Pixel; Real time systems; Retina; Silicon;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0162-8828
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/34.730552
Filename
730552
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