digital image. basic image concepts an image is a spatial representation of an object an image can...
TRANSCRIPT
DIGITAL IMAGE
Basic Image Concepts
An image is a spatial representation of an object
An image can be thought of as a function with resulting values of the light intensity at each point over a planar region
In computers, this function must be sampled at discrete intervals
Basic Image Concepts
An image can be represented as a matrix of pixels
Intensity at each pixel is represented by an integer (called a gray scale level) into which the color of the image is encoded
If there are just 2 intensity values, 0 and 1 represent black and white (1 bit)
If 8-bit integers, color levels range from 0 (black) to 255 (white)
Basic Image Concepts
Spatial Resolution - number of pixels in the matrix (pixels X pixels). Affects amount of detail that can be displayed
Image size - can be very large. E.g. 640X480 image with 8bits/pixel 307,200 8bit integers 2,457,600 bits
Basic Image Concepts
Image Format - a stored image is an array of values Each value represents data associated with
a pixel in the image For color, this value may be:
3 numbers - intensities of red, green and blue components of color at that pixel
3 numbers - indices to tables of RGB intensities 1 number - index to table of color triples 1 number - index to other color models, such as
CMY, YIQ, HSB, etc
COLOURS
Number of Colours 1 Bit per pixel = 2 Colours 4 Bit per pixel = 16 Colours 8 Bit per pixel = 256 Colours 16 Bit per pixel = 65536 Colours 24 Bit per pixel = 16.7 Million Colours
Colour Resolution: No. of pixels at any given time on the screen
Colour Monitor Video Modes
640 x 480 800 X 600 1024 x 768 1600 x 1200
Dot Pitch Actual difference between two pixels on
the monitor. Refresh Rate: The speed with which
every line is illuminated one after another and it is measured in Hz.
Color Fundamentals
Commonly used color models RGB = Red, Green, Blue -
additive primary colors (color monitors)
CMY = Cyan, Magenta, Yellow - subtractive primary colors plus black (color printers)
Color Fundamentals
Dithering Added to sample data for the purpose of
minimizing quantization error a photo may contain millions of colors but an 8 bit color palette contains only 256
colors so a mapping must be done at each pixel to
determine the “closest” available color in the palette
a mathematical process
Colour Properties
Hue distinguishes among colors such as red, green, and yellow.
Saturation refers to how far color is from a gray of equal intensity.
Lightness embodies the achromatic notion of perceived intensity of a reflecting object.
Brightness is used instead of lightness for a self-luminous object such as CRT.
Types of Graphics
Raster Graphics: Technique of dividing the entire image area into
pixels or small dots, and record the image data. High storage required Difficult to process
Vector Graphics Technique of storing the graphics using lines,
arcs, circles or basic shapes and sizes. Less Storage Easy to Modify Difficult to represent the actual picture
Image Editing
Resampling or Resizing Dithering Flipping Rotating Selection Masking Zooming Colour Correction Anti-aliasing
Images Filters
Blur Pinch Punch Sketch Edge