Paper
23 June 2000 Relevant spatial frequency information in the texture segmentation of night-vision imagery
Michael J. Sinai, J. Kevin DeFord, Todd J. Purkiss, Edward A. Essock
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
We investigated the type of spatial structure present in nighttime imagery that is perceptually relevant for human observers to be able to perform texture-based segmentation of real world scenes. Three psychophysical tasks were developed to evaluate performance of the nighttime imagery. The test imagery consisted of scenes obtained via an image-intensified low=light CCD, a long-wave infrared sensor and monochrome sensor-fusion. For one task, performance was best with the fused imagery, but for two tasks, performance with fused imagery was not improved (compared to performance with ir imagery). Spatial filtering of the scenes and further testing revealed that the mid spatial frequencies (1-4 cpd) were more critical in determining performance than either the low or high frequencies. Fourier analysis of the scenes revealed a strong relationship between power and performance, where scenes with more power (especially at the middle frequencies) supported better performance. Implications of this research are that performance depends on power at the middle frequencies for those low-level visual tasks and that fusion algorithms may be improved if this is taken under consideration.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Michael J. Sinai, J. Kevin DeFord, Todd J. Purkiss, and Edward A. Essock "Relevant spatial frequency information in the texture segmentation of night-vision imagery", Proc. SPIE 4023, Enhanced and Synthetic Vision 2000, (23 June 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.389335
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Cited by 5 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image segmentation

Infrared imaging

Image fusion

Sensors

Spatial frequencies

Image filtering

Infrared sensors

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