Paper
17 March 2015 A transformation-aware perceptual image metric
Petr Kellnhofer, Tobias Ritschel, Karol Myszkowski, Hans-Peter Seidel
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 9394, Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XX; 939408 (2015) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2076754
Event: SPIE/IS&T Electronic Imaging, 2015, San Francisco, California, United States
Abstract
Predicting human visual perception has several applications such as compression, rendering, editing and retargeting. Current approaches however, ignore the fact that the human visual system compensates for geometric transformations, e. g., we see that an image and a rotated copy are identical. Instead, they will report a large, false-positive difference. At the same time, if the transformations become too strong or too spatially incoherent, comparing two images indeed gets increasingly difficult. Between these two extrema, we propose a system to quantify the effect of transformations, not only on the perception of image differences, but also on saliency. To this end, we first fit local homographies to a given optical flow field and then convert this field into a field of elementary transformations such as translation, rotation, scaling, and perspective. We conduct a perceptual experiment quantifying the increase of difficulty when compensating for elementary transformations. Transformation entropy is proposed as a novel measure of complexity in a flow field. This representation is then used for applications, such as comparison of non-aligned images, where transformations cause threshold elevation, and detection of salient transformations.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Petr Kellnhofer, Tobias Ritschel, Karol Myszkowski, and Hans-Peter Seidel "A transformation-aware perceptual image metric", Proc. SPIE 9394, Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XX, 939408 (17 March 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2076754
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Visualization

Optical flow

Image quality

Motion models

Image compression

Visual process modeling

3D image processing

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