New method of determining the surface reflectance factor

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
XiChang Wang ◽  
Yanjun Gong ◽  
Guilan Beng
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Hiroyasu Usami ◽  
Yuji Iwahori ◽  
Aili Wang ◽  
M. K. Bhuyan ◽  
Naotaka Ogasawara ◽  
...  

Background:Polyp shapes play an important role in colorectal diagnosis. However, endoscopy images are usually composed of nonrigid objects such as a polyp. Hence, it is challenging for polyp shape recovery. It is demanded to establish a support system of the colorectal diagnosis system based on polyp shape.Introduction:Shape from Shading (SFS) is one valuable approach based on photoclinometry for polyp shape recovery. SFS and endoscope image are compatible on the first sight, but there are constraints for applying SFS to endoscope image. Those approaches need some parameters like a depth from the endoscope lens to the surface, and surface reflectance factor . Furthermore, those approaches assume the whole surface which has the same value of for the Lambertian surface.Methods:This paper contributes to mitigating constraint for applying SFS to the endoscope image based on a cue from the medical structure. An extracted medical suture is used to estimate parameters, and a method of polyp shape recovery method is proposed using both geometric and photometric constraint equations. Notably, the proposed method realizes polyp shape recovery from a single endoscope image.Results:From experiments it was confirmed that the approximate polyp model shape was recovered and the proposed method recovered absolute size and shape of polyp using medical suture information and obtained parameters from a single endoscope image.Conclusion:This paper proposed a polyp shape recovery method which mitigated the constraint for applying SFS to the endoscope image using the medical suture. Notably, the proposed method realized polyp shape recovery from a single endoscope image without generating uniform Lambertian reflectance.


1989 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald G. Holm ◽  
Ray D. Jackson ◽  
Benfan Yuan ◽  
M. Susan Moran ◽  
Philip N. Slater ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nick Gorkavyi ◽  
Simon Carn ◽  
Matt DeLand ◽  
Yuri Knyazikhin ◽  
Nick Krotkov ◽  
...  

The Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) on the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite observes the entire Sun-illuminated Earth from sunrise to sunset from the L1 Sun-Earth Lagrange point. The L1 location, however, confines the observed phase angles to ∼2°–12°, a nearly backscattering direction, precluding any information on the bidirectional surface reflectance factor (BRF) or cloud/aerosol phase function. Deploying an analog of EPIC on the Moon’s surface would offer a unique opportunity to image the full range of Earth phases, including observing ocean/cloud glint reflection for different phase angles; monitoring of transient volcanic clouds; detection of circum-polar mesospheric and stratospheric clouds; estimating the surface BRF and full phase-angle integrated albedo; and monitoring of vegetation characteristics for different phase angles.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Davide D Alimonte ◽  
Tamito kajiyama ◽  
Giuseppe Zibordi ◽  
Barbara Bulgarelli

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