An Effective Sharpness Assessment Method For Shallow Depth-Of-Field Images

Author(s):  
Zhixiang Duan ◽  
Guangxin Li ◽  
Guoliang Fan
Author(s):  
Shengli Fan ◽  
Mei Yu ◽  
Gangyi Jiang ◽  
Yigang Wang ◽  
Hao Jiang ◽  
...  

For the light microscopy images that have the characteristics of shallow depth of field, serious distortion and poor resolution, mismatch is a ubiquitous phenomenon. The paper presents a mismatch detection method for the stereo light microscopy stereo matching. Affine transformation matrix and matching constraint condition are calibrated by the calibration board which has the precision solid dots and the motorized stage. Bias vector of affine transformation of each matching pair is taken as the criteria to apply mismatch detection. The experimental results show that the method can detect more mismatching pairs and preserve more matching pairs than the traditional RANSAC method and the epipolar rectification method.


2007 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 281-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyuman Jeong ◽  
Dongyeon Kim ◽  
Soon-Yong Park ◽  
Seungyong Lee
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
pp. 50-69
Author(s):  
Gerd Gemünden

Martel’s second feature, La niña santa/The Holy Girl, is an extended meditation on religion and sexuality, as experienced by an adolescent girl. The chapter argues that the film invokes tropes from the horror genre not in order to revel in blood and gore but to question epistemological foundations. Again, Martel insists that cinema is not just a medium of visual representation but a physical and multisensory embodiment of culture. Both thematically and visually, the film emphasizes acts of touching and hearing, often captured through a shallow depth of field that focuses on individual body parts.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 1815
Author(s):  
Ke Xian ◽  
Juewen Peng ◽  
Chao Zhang ◽  
Hao Lu ◽  
Zhiguo Cao

Shallow depth-of-field (DoF), focusing on the region of interest by blurring out the rest of the image, is challenging in computer vision and computational photography. It can be achieved either by adjusting the parameters (e.g., aperture and focal length) of a single-lens reflex camera or computational techniques. In this paper, we investigate the latter one, i.e., explore a computational method to render shallow DoF. The previous methods either rely on portrait segmentation or stereo sensing, which can only be applied to portrait photos and require stereo inputs. To address these issues, we study the problem of rendering shallow DoF from an arbitrary image. In particular, we propose a method that consists of a salient object detection (SOD) module, a monocular depth prediction (MDP) module, and a DoF rendering module. The SOD module determines the focal plane, while the MDP module controls the blur degree. Specifically, we introduce a label-guided ranking loss for both salient object detection and depth prediction. For salient object detection, the label-guided ranking loss comprises two terms: (i) heterogeneous ranking loss that encourages the sampled salient pixels to be different from background pixels; (ii) homogeneous ranking loss penalizes the inconsistency of salient pixels or background pixels. For depth prediction, the label-guided ranking loss mainly relies on multilevel structural information, i.e., from low-level edge maps to high-level object instance masks. In addition, we introduce a SOD and depth-aware blur rendering method to generate shallow DoF images. Comprehensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed method.


2015 ◽  
Vol 08 (06) ◽  
pp. 1550029 ◽  
Author(s):  
Han-Chao Chang ◽  
Yu-Hsuan Lin ◽  
Kuo-Cheng Huang

Laser skin perforation is an effective and promising technique for use in blood collection. In this study, the relation between the perforation profile of skin and laser irradiation at various energies is discussed. Increasing laser energy does not uniformly expand the size and depth of a hole because the shallow depth of field (DOF) of the focused light primarily concentrates energy on the skin surface. In practice, the hole gradually transforms from a semielliptical shape to an upside-down avocado shape as the laser energy increases. This phenomenon can increase the amount of bleeding and reduce pain. The findings support the feasibility of developing an accurate laser skin perforation method.


2020 ◽  
pp. 016344372093944
Author(s):  
Sy Taffel

Computational photography is currently altering the representational and social functions of photographic imaging. A range of heavily automated computational processing techniques produce images that remediate digital photography to circumvent physical limitations associated with the size of smartphones, emulating the aesthetics associated with larger format digital cameras and professional photographic workflows and practices. These processes include automated compositing where images seen by users are constituted of up to 15 individual frames, the simulation of a shallow depth-of-field, automated facial retouching and even providing automated assistance to suggest alternative frames within the image stream to serve as the base image. This article explores these emerging techniques and accompanying claims that such processes are radically transforming photographic practice. While the extent and modes of automation and algorithmic processing depart from prior practices, contextualising them within the histories of photographic compositing and the algorithmic malleability of digital photography suggests the intensification of existing trends rather than an epistemic break. Furthermore, exploring the representational politics of automated facial retouching and the datafication of images situates these changes within the broader social context of dataveillance and platform capitalism.


Author(s):  
C. T. Nightingale ◽  
S. E. Summers ◽  
T. P. Turnbull

The ease of operation of the scanning electron microscope has insured its wide application in medicine and industry. The micrographs are pictorial representations of surface topography obtained directly from the specimen. The need to replicate is eliminated. The great depth of field and the high resolving power provide far more information than light microscopy.


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