10 INTRODUCTION
1.3. CONCEPTUAL LAYOUT
Figure 1.5 shows the relationship between the various stages in a geometric
transformation. It is by no means a strict recipe for the order in which warping is
achieved. Instead, the purpose of this figure is to convey a conceptual layout, and to
serve as a roadmap for this book.
Scanline Algorithms (Chp. 7)
I Image Resamplin..g (Cap. 5)
Ima e Reconstructran
Scene '11 Acquisitinll ] [ ' I]
(Cap. 2) / /
Spatial FAit (Cap. 6)
Transformation
(Cap. 3) T
Output
Image
Figure 1.5: Conceptual layout.
An image is first acud by a digital image acquisition system. It then passes
through the image resamplng gtage, consisting of a reconstruction substage to compute a
continuous image and a saling substage that samples it at any desired location. The
exact positions at which resampling oc0urs is defined by the spatial transformation. The
output image is obtained once image resampling is completed.
In order to avoid artifacts in the output, the msampling stage must abide by the prin-
ciples of digital filtering. Antialias filtering is introduc..xl for this purpose. It serves to
process the image so that artifacts due to undersampling are mitigated. The theory and
justification for this filtering is derived from sampling theory. In practice, image msam-
pling and digital filtering am collapsed into efficient algorithms which are tightly cou-
pled. As a result, the stages that contribute to image resampling are depicted as being
integrated into scanline algorithms.
2
PRELIMINARIES
In this chapter, we begin our study of digital image warping with a review of some
basic terminology and mathematical preliminaries. This shall help to lay our treatment
of image warping on firm ground. In particular, elements of this chapter comprise a for-
mulation that will be found to be recurring throughout this book. After the definitions
and notation have been clarified, we turn to a description of digital image acquisition.
This stage is responsible for converting a continuous image of a scene into a discrete
representation that is suitable for digital computers. Attention is given to the imaging
components in digital image acquisition systems. The operation of these devices is
explained and an overview of a general imaging system is given. Finally, we conclude
with a presentation of input images that will be used repeatedly throughout this book.
These images will later be subjected to geometric transformations to demonstrate various
warping and filtering algorithms.
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