Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Excerpt from Robotics Research Technical Report: Review of Multifrequency Channel Decompositions, of Images and Wavelet Models
In psychophysics and physiology of human vision. Many evidences have been gathered showing that the retina image is decomposed into several spatially oriented frequency channels. In the first section of this paper, we describe the experimental motivations of this model. Biolog ical studies of human vision have always been a source of ideas for computer vision and image processing research. Indeed. The human visual system is generally considered as an optimal image processor. The goal is not to imitate the processings immemented in the human brains but rather to understand the motivations of such processings and analyze their applications to computer vision problems. From this point of view. The recent experimental findings in psychophysics and physiology open challenging questions. In order to get a better understanding of multichannel decompositions. We review the main mathematical results in this domain. The best know decom position which is intermediate between a spatial and a frequency representation is the window Fourier transform. We describe its properties but also show from a mathematical point of view why it is not convenient to analyze images. The wavelet transfonn was introduced by J. Morlet to compensate the inconveniences of a window Fourier transform. It is computed by expanding the signal on a family of functions which are the dilate and translate of a unique function w(x)
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