Paper
1 November 1991 Digital halftoning using a generalized Peano scan
Takeshi Agui, Takanori Nagae, Masayuki Nakajima
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
There are many kinds of image processing that are essentially sequential. Raster scan is commonly used for such sequential operations, to scan images from left to right, and line by line. Another scanning, called the Peano scan, traverses an image from a pixel to its neighboring one and the direction frequently changes. This scan prevents from producing periodic patterns, which are sometimes observed in images transformed in raster scan line order. However, the Peano scan is applied to only square images, and the horizontal and vertical sizes must be a power of two. We present a new scanning, called a ternary scan, which has the same property as the Peano scan and can fit to any rectangular images. Application of the ternary scan to Floyd-Steinberg's halftoning is shown.
© (1991) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Takeshi Agui, Takanori Nagae, and Masayuki Nakajima "Digital halftoning using a generalized Peano scan", Proc. SPIE 1606, Visual Communications and Image Processing '91: Image Processing, (1 November 1991); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.50378
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image processing

Raster graphics

Visual communications

Binary data

Diffusion

Fractal analysis

Image compression

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