Image processing: Difference between revisions
m disambig |
should be merged with Digital image processing |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{merge|Digital image processing}} |
|||
'''Image processing''' is the application of [[signal processing]] |
'''Image processing''' is the application of [[signal processing]] |
||
techniques to the domain of [[images]] — two-dimensional [[signal]]s such as [[photography|photographs]] or [[video]]. |
techniques to the domain of [[images]] — two-dimensional [[signal]]s such as [[photography|photographs]] or [[video]]. |
Revision as of 19:28, 12 June 2005
Image processing is the application of signal processing techniques to the domain of images — two-dimensional signals such as photographs or video.
Most of the signal processing concepts that apply to one-dimensional signals — such as resolution, dynamic range, bandwidth, filtering, etc. — extend naturally to images as well. However, image processing brings some new concepts — such as connectivity and rotational invariance — that are meaningful or useful only for two-dimensional signals. Also, certain one-dimensional concepts — such as differential operators, edge detection, and domain modulation — become substantially more complicated when extended to two dimensions.
A few decades ago, image processing was done largely in the analog domain, chiefly by optical devices. Optical methods are inherently parallel, and for that reason they are still essential to holography and a few other applications. However, as computers keep getting faster, analog techniques are being increasingly replaced by digital image processing techniques — which are more versatile, reliable, accurate, and easier to implement.
See also
- optics
- photography
- imaging
- computer vision
- computer graphics
- Digital image processing
- digitizing
- super-resolution