Digital Pictures: Representation and Compression

Digital Pictures: Representation and Compression

by Arun Netravali
Digital Pictures: Representation and Compression

Digital Pictures: Representation and Compression

by Arun Netravali

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1988)

$169.99 
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Overview

For thousands of years mankind has been creating pictures which attempt to portray real or imagined scenes as perceived by human vision. Cave drawings, paintings and photographs are able to stimulate the visual system and conjure up thoughts of faraway places, imagined situations or pleasant sensations. The art of motion picture creation has advanced to the point where viewers often undergo intense emotional experiences. On-the­ spot news coverage gives the impression of actually witnessing events as they unfold. Relatively recently, other forms of visual information have been invented which do not, in themselves, stimulate the eye. For example, voltage variations in an electrical signal, as in television, can represent in analogous fashion the brightness variations in a picture. In this form the visual information can be stored on magnetic tape or transmitted over long distances, and, at least for engineering purposes, it is often much more use­ ful than other forms which do stimulate human vision. With the evolution of digital techniques for information processing, storage, and transmission, the need arises for digital representation of visual information, that is, the representation of images by a sequence of integer numbers (usually binary). In this form, computer processing and digital circuit techniques can be utilized which were undreamed of only a short time ago. Machine manipulation and interpretation of visual information becomes possible. Sophisticated techniques can be employed for efficient storage of images. And processing methods can be used to significantly reduce the costs of picture transmission.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781468412963
Publisher: Springer US
Publication date: 12/24/2012
Series: Applications of Communications Theory
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1988
Pages: 586
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.05(d)

Table of Contents

1. Numerical Representation of Visual Information.- 1.1 Visual Information.- 1.2 Representation by a Finite Amount of Data.- 1.3 Spatial Sampling Representation.- 1.4 Raster Scan.- 1.5 Fourier-Frequency Domain.- 1.6 Time Varying Images.- 1.7 Quantization and Binary Word Assignment—PCM.- 1.8 Color Images.- 1.9 Graphics.- 2. Common Picture Communication Systems.- 2.1 Monochrome Television.- 2.2 Color Television.- 2.3 Videoconferencing.- 2.4 Videotelephone.- 2.5 High Definition Television (HDTV).- 2.6 Graphics.- 2.7 Interactive Picture Communication Systems.- 2.8 Earth Resources Imagery.- 3. Redundancy-Statistics-Models.- 3.1 Redundancy in the Sampled Data—Information Theory.- 3.2 Monochrome Luminance Statistics.- 3.3 Color Picture Statistics.- 3.4 Statistics of Graphical Signals.- 4. Visual Psychophysics.- 4.1 Subjective Testing.- 4.2 The Human Eye.- 4.3 Psychophysics of Vision.- 4.4 Psychophysics of Color Vision.- 4.5 Models for Picture Quality.- 5. Basic Compression Techniques.- 5.1 Pulse Code Modulation (PCM).- 5.2 Predictive Coding.- 5.3 Transform Coding of Blocks of Samples.- 5.4 Hybrid Transform Coding Techniques.- 5.5 Other Block Coding.- 5.6 Miscellaneous Coding Methods.- 5.7 Coding of Graphics.- 6. Examples of Codec Designs.- 6.1 Image Coding Method for Freeze-Frame Videoconferencing.- 6.2 45 Mbs Intrafield DPCM Codec for NTSC Color Video.- 6.3 Adaptive Predictive Interfield Coder for NTSC Color TV.- 6.4 Interfield Hybrid Transform Coder for Component Color TV.- 6.5 Decomposition of Single Images into Edges and Texture.- 6.6 Conditional Replenishment DPCM Codecs.- 6.7 Graphic Coders.- 7. Postscript.- 7.1 Signal Sources.- 7.2 The Human Receiver.- 7.3 Waveform Encoding.- 7.4 Parameter Coding.- 7.5 Bit Rates Versus Complexity.- 7.6 Future Directions and UltimateLimits.- 7.7 Concluding Remarks.
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