Xavier Muñoz Pujol
La tesis se centra en la Visión por Computador y, más concretamente, en la segmentación de imágenes, la cual es una de las etapas básicas en el análisis de imágenes y consiste en la división de la imagen en un conjunto de regiones visualmente distintas y uniformes considerando su intensidad, color o textura.
Se propone una estrategia basada en el uso complementario de la información de región y de frontera durante el proceso de segmentación, integración que permite paliar algunos de los problemas básicos de la segmentación tradicional. La información de frontera permite inicialmente identificar el número de regiones presentes en la imagen y colocar en el interior de cada una de ellas una semilla, con el objetivo de modelar estadísticamente las características de las regiones y definir de esta forma la información de región. Esta información, conjuntamente con la información de frontera, es utilizada en la definición de una función de energía que expresa las propiedades requeridas a la segmentación deseada: uniformidad en el interior de las regiones y contraste con las regiones vecinas en los límites. Un conjunto de regiones activas inician entonces su crecimiento, compitiendo por los píxeles de la imagen, con el objetivo de optimizar la función de energía o, en otras palabras, encontrar la segmentación que mejor se adecua a los requerimientos exprsados en dicha función. Finalmente, todo esta proceso ha sido considerado en una estructura piramidal, lo que nos permite refinar progresivamente el resultado de la segmentación y mejorar su coste computacional.
La estrategia ha sido extendida al problema de segmentación de texturas, lo que implica algunas consideraciones básicas como el modelaje de las regiones a partir de un conjunto de características de textura y la extracción de la información de frontera cuando la textura es presente en la imagen.
Finalmente, se ha llevado a cabo la extensión a la segmentación de imágenes teniendo en cuenta las propiedades de color y textura. En este sentido, el uso conjunto de técnicas no-paramétricas de estimación de la función de densidad para la descripción del color, y de características textuales basadas en la matriz de co-ocurrencia, ha sido propuesto para modelar adecuadamente y de forma completa las regiones de la imagen.
La propuesta ha sido evaluada de forma objetiva y comparada con distintas técnicas de integración utilizando imágenes sintéticas. Además, se han incluido experimentos con imágenes reales con resultados muy positivos.
Image segmentation is an important research area in computer vision and many segmentation methods have been proposed. However, elemental segmentation techniques based on boundary or region approaches often fail to produce accurate segmentation results. Hence, in the last few years, there has been a tendency towards the integration of both techniques in order to improve the results by taking into account the complementary nature of such information. This thesis proposes a solution to the image segmentation integrating region and boundary information. Moreover, the method is extended to texture and colour texture segmentation.
An exhaustive analysis of image segmentation techniques which integrate region and boundary information is carried out. Main strategies to perform the integration are identified and a classification of these approaches is proposed. Thus, the most relevant proposals are assorted and grouped in their corresponding approach. Moreover, characteristics of these strategies as well as the general lack of attention that is given to the texture is noted. The discussion of these aspects has been the origin of all the work evolved in this thesis, giving rise to two basic conclusions: first, the possibility of fusing several approaches to the integration of both information sources, and second, the necessity of a specific treatment for textured images.
Next, an unsupervised segmentation strategy which integrates region and boundary information and incorporates three different approaches identified in the previous review is proposed. Specifically, the proposed image segmentation method combines the guidance of seed placement, the control of decision criterion and the boundary refinement approaches. The method is composed by two basic stages: initialisation and segmentation. Thus, in the first stage, the main contours of the image are used to identify the different regions present in the image and to adequately place a seed for each one in order to statistically model the region. Then, the segmentation stage is performed based on the active region model which allows us to take region and boundary information into account in order to segment the whole image. Specifically, regions start to shrink and expand guided by the optimisation of an energy function that ensures homogeneity properties inside regions and the presence of real edges at boundaries. Furthermore, with the aim of imitating the Human Vision System when a person is slowly approaching to a distant object, a pyramidal structure is considered. Hence, the method has been designed on a pyramidal representation which allows us to refine the region boundaries from a coarse to a fine resolution, and ensuring noise robustness as well as computation efficiency.
The proposed segmentation strategy is then adapted to solve the problem of texture and colour texture segmentation. First, the proposed strategy is extended to texture segmentation which involves some considerations as the region modelling and the extraction of texture boundary information. Next, a method to integrate colour and textural properties is proposed, which is based on the use of texture descriptors and the estimation of colour behaviour by using non-parametric techniques of density estimation. Hence, the proposed strategy of segmentation is considered for the segmentation taking both colour and textural properties into account.
Finally, the proposal of image segmentation strategy is objectively evaluated and then compared with some other relevant algorithms corresponding to the different strategies of region and boundary integration. Moreover, an evaluation of the segmentation results obtained on colour texture segmentation is performed. Furthermore, results on a wide set of real images are shown and discussed.
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