Paper
1 May 1994 Applications of fractal analysis in the evaluation of halftoning algorithms and a fractal-based halftoning scheme
Theophano Mitsa, Jennifer R. Alford
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 2179, Human Vision, Visual Processing, and Digital Display V; (1994) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.172671
Event: IS&T/SPIE 1994 International Symposium on Electronic Imaging: Science and Technology, 1994, San Jose, CA, United States
Abstract
Fractals are mathematical sets that model many natural phenomena and physical object such as clouds, mountains, trees, and coastlines. The principal features of fractal objects are: (1) a large degree of heterogeneity, (2) scaling similarity over many scales of observation, and (3) the lack of a well-defined (or characteristic) scale. In this paper, we investigate the applications of fractal analysis in halftoning. Specifically, we first investigate and compare the fractal properties of aperiodic constant-gray-level halftone patterns produced by error diffusion, the blue-noise mask, and white noise. Then, given that the fractal dimension of an image area can predict the perceived smoothness or roughness of this area's texture, we describe an error diffusion scheme where the error weights depend on the local fractal dimension of the gray scale image prior to halftoning. The resulting halftones have less grainy flat areas and sharper edges than standard error diffusion with perturbed weights. This can be attributed to incorporation of texture information in the ehalftoning scheme that distributes the halftoning error in proportion to local texture roughness and therefore diffuses it in the areas where it is least visible.
© (1994) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Theophano Mitsa and Jennifer R. Alford "Applications of fractal analysis in the evaluation of halftoning algorithms and a fractal-based halftoning scheme", Proc. SPIE 2179, Human Vision, Visual Processing, and Digital Display V, (1 May 1994); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.172671
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KEYWORDS
Fractal analysis

Diffusion

Image segmentation

Halftones

Visualization

Error analysis

Binary data

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