Real Time Image Fusion Based Technique for Medical Images

2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (9) ◽  
pp. 4500-4508
Author(s):  
H. R. Ramya ◽  
B. K. Sujatha

To tackle the cost of storage and storage space with fast-growing technologies, the image fusion is playing an important role in several image-processing areas such as medical-imaging and satelliteimaging. This fused picture is appropriate for machine perception, human visual analysis or further analysis assignment. Recently the computing method such as fuzzy logic model has been extensively used in the field of image-processing due to the uniqueness of handling uncertain modeling. The fuzzy logic based image-fusion model generally performed better with respect to other existing image fusion models. In this paper, we considered type-2 fuzzy logic, which has similar function to earlier fuzzy logic technique but consist more functionality that allows optimized management of higher degrees under uncertainty. Interval type-2 fuzzy-logic-system (IT2FLS) are widely used fuzzy sets due to their ease of use and computational simplicity. A real time image fusion (RTIF) technique that is based on the IT2FLS is used to overcome the excess computation time and nonlinear uncertainties, which is present in the medical images. In the result simulation section, we have shown that our proposed model has taken less computation time and provided better quality assessment matrices with respect to existing system.

Author(s):  
Christian Arnold ◽  
Scott Nykl ◽  
Scott Graham ◽  
Robert Leishman

We propose a new algorithm variant for Structure from Motion (SfM) to enable real-time image processing of scenes imaged by aerial drones. Our new SfM variant runs in real-time at 4 Hz equating to an 80× computation time speed-up compared to traditional SfM and is capable of a 90% size reduction of original video imagery, with an added benefit of presenting the original two-dimensional (2D) video data as a three-dimensional (3D) virtual model. This opens many potential applications for a real-time image processing that could make autonomous vision–based navigation possible by completely replacing the need for a traditional live video feed. The 3D reconstruction that is generated comes with the added benefit of being able to generate a spatially accurate representation of a live environment that is precise enough to generate global positioning system (GPS) coordinates from any given point on an imaged structure, even in a GPS-denied environment.


2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Fay ◽  
Paul Ilardi ◽  
Nathan Sheldon ◽  
Daniel Grau ◽  
Robert Biehl ◽  
...  

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