Retinex算法:用于解决许多不同问题的许多空间处理

J. McCann
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Introduction Edwin Land coined the word Retinex in 1963. He used it to describe the theoretical need for three independent color channels to explain human color constancy.[1] The word was a contraction of “retina” and “cortex”. A “Retinex” is a theoretical color channel that makes spatial comparisons so as to calculate lightness sensations, namely the range of appearances between light and dark. Land had enthusiastically experimented with two-color projections in the late 1950’s and early 60’s.[2] By that time, he had hundreds of patents on many different photographic systems. He was well aware of the possibilities, and limitations, of silver halide photography. Before his Red and White light projection experiments, he accepted the standard explanation of color. Namely, color was the result of the local quanta catches of receptors with different spectral sensitivities. Human color vision was thought to behave the way that color film did; in that color was a local phenomenon that resulted from spectral responses within each very small image segment. The quanta catches of the triplet of retinal cones in a small retinal region generated color appearances. An accidental observation made a colleague in a late-night experiment changed all. The colleague remarked that there was more color than expected from mixtures of photographic separations using red and white lights. Land responded: “ Oh yes, that is adaptation.” At two o’clock in the morning, Land sat up in bed, and said : “Adaptation, what adaptation?” He immediately returned to the lab to repeat the experiment. For the rest of his life, human color vision was a favorite research area. What was it that Land had seen, so briefly, that made him return to the lab in the middle of the night? Human Trichromatic Color Theory and film have always been linked. When Thomas Young made his famous suggestion of human trichromacy in 1802, his colleague at the Royal Institution, Humphrey Davy, was studying a black and white photographic system. Young was the editor of the Institutions journal that described the work.[3] Young was well aware of silver halide’s response to light. That night, Land realized there was nothing he could do with a locally-responsive silver-halide system to make film behave the way that vision did. The color appearances in those projections could not be understood from the quanta catches of receptors in a tiny local region. Human color appearances are fundamentally different. It is spatial comparisons that control color sensations. Silver halide film uses quanta catches in a very small area which includes a small fraction of all the light-sensitive grains. Distant objects cannot influence the film’s response to its quanta catch of each tiny segment. Figure 1 illustrates the human visual pathway that begins with the visual pigments located in the distal tips of the cone and rod receptors in the retina (red ellipse). The quanta catch of these visual pigments initiates the spectral response to light. The receptors provide only the first response to the image on the retina. Appearance is the result of spatial processing along the entire visual pathway. Figure 1. Illustration of the many stages of spatial comparisons in the visual pathway. John Dowling, greatly expanded the work of Hecht and Wald, by describing the complex retinal spatial interactions.[4] Berson has recently shown spatial modulation from Melanopsin photopigment in ganglion cells.[5] In 1953, Kuffler [6] and Barlow [7] showed ganglion cells in the optic nerve make spatial comparisons. Hubel and Wiesel [8], DeValois [9] found spatial comparison cells in the cortex. Semir Zeki [10] found color constancy cells in V4 cortical cells. The dominant theme in research on the human visual pathway over the past 80 years has been the documentation of human spatial mechanisms at every stage along the visual pathway. level. Vision is a spatial process. Vision’s Ratio-making Sense In 1974 Land wrote in his Friday Evening Discourse at the Royal Institution: “This Discourse is about a generally unrecognized animal sense-the ratio-making sense. It is the ratiomaking sense which processes the radiation reaching our eyes in such a way as to discover the constant properties of objects in relation to the radiation falling on them.”[11] Figure 2 illustrated the papers surrounding the “Lightness and Retinex” article.Use reference [12] for download with links to papers. 1971 Land, & McCann Designator 1983 Land 1986 Land 1970 McCann, Land, Tatnall Gradients • 74aMcCanns.pdf • 75SavoyMcCann.pdf • 78cMcCann et al.pdf • 78a McCann.pdf • 78bSavoy.pdf • 80McCannHall.pdf 1971 Horn 1976 McCann, McKee,Taylor 1977 Land Sci Amer 2012 McCann, Parraman, Rizzi 1978 Land, Royal Institute 1970 Land, Ferrari, Kagan, McCann Reset 1968 Land. 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A “Retinex” is a theoretical color channel that makes spatial comparisons so as to calculate lightness sensations, namely the range of appearances between light and dark. Land had enthusiastically experimented with two-color projections in the late 1950’s and early 60’s.[2] By that time, he had hundreds of patents on many different photographic systems. He was well aware of the possibilities, and limitations, of silver halide photography. Before his Red and White light projection experiments, he accepted the standard explanation of color. Namely, color was the result of the local quanta catches of receptors with different spectral sensitivities. Human color vision was thought to behave the way that color film did; in that color was a local phenomenon that resulted from spectral responses within each very small image segment. The quanta catches of the triplet of retinal cones in a small retinal region generated color appearances. An accidental observation made a colleague in a late-night experiment changed all. The colleague remarked that there was more color than expected from mixtures of photographic separations using red and white lights. Land responded: “ Oh yes, that is adaptation.” At two o’clock in the morning, Land sat up in bed, and said : “Adaptation, what adaptation?” He immediately returned to the lab to repeat the experiment. For the rest of his life, human color vision was a favorite research area. What was it that Land had seen, so briefly, that made him return to the lab in the middle of the night? Human Trichromatic Color Theory and film have always been linked. When Thomas Young made his famous suggestion of human trichromacy in 1802, his colleague at the Royal Institution, Humphrey Davy, was studying a black and white photographic system. Young was the editor of the Institutions journal that described the work.[3] Young was well aware of silver halide’s response to light. That night, Land realized there was nothing he could do with a locally-responsive silver-halide system to make film behave the way that vision did. The color appearances in those projections could not be understood from the quanta catches of receptors in a tiny local region. Human color appearances are fundamentally different. It is spatial comparisons that control color sensations. Silver halide film uses quanta catches in a very small area which includes a small fraction of all the light-sensitive grains. Distant objects cannot influence the film’s response to its quanta catch of each tiny segment. Figure 1 illustrates the human visual pathway that begins with the visual pigments located in the distal tips of the cone and rod receptors in the retina (red ellipse). The quanta catch of these visual pigments initiates the spectral response to light. The receptors provide only the first response to the image on the retina. Appearance is the result of spatial processing along the entire visual pathway. Figure 1. Illustration of the many stages of spatial comparisons in the visual pathway. John Dowling, greatly expanded the work of Hecht and Wald, by describing the complex retinal spatial interactions.[4] Berson has recently shown spatial modulation from Melanopsin photopigment in ganglion cells.[5] In 1953, Kuffler [6] and Barlow [7] showed ganglion cells in the optic nerve make spatial comparisons. Hubel and Wiesel [8], DeValois [9] found spatial comparison cells in the cortex. Semir Zeki [10] found color constancy cells in V4 cortical cells. The dominant theme in research on the human visual pathway over the past 80 years has been the documentation of human spatial mechanisms at every stage along the visual pathway. level. Vision is a spatial process. Vision’s Ratio-making Sense In 1974 Land wrote in his Friday Evening Discourse at the Royal Institution: “This Discourse is about a generally unrecognized animal sense-the ratio-making sense. It is the ratiomaking sense which processes the radiation reaching our eyes in such a way as to discover the constant properties of objects in relation to the radiation falling on them.”[11] Figure 2 illustrated the papers surrounding the “Lightness and Retinex” article.Use reference [12] for download with links to papers. 1971 Land, & McCann Designator 1983 Land 1986 Land 1970 McCann, Land, Tatnall Gradients • 74aMcCanns.pdf • 75SavoyMcCann.pdf • 78cMcCann et al.pdf • 78a McCann.pdf • 78bSavoy.pdf • 80McCannHall.pdf 1971 Horn 1976 McCann, McKee,Taylor 1977 Land Sci Amer 2012 McCann, Parraman, Rizzi 1978 Land, Royal Institute 1970 Land, Ferrari, Kagan, McCann Reset 1968 Land. 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引用次数: 8

摘要

有许多不同的Retinex算法。他们做出不同的假设,试图解决不同的问题。他们有不同的目标、基本事实和输出结果。这个“Retinex 50周年研讨会”比较了各种Retinex算法,以及它们的目标,衡量它们结果成功的基本事实。所有的Retinex算法都使用空间比较来计算整个场景的外观。所有的Retinex算法都需要观测者的数据来量化人类视觉,从而评估其准确性。所有Retinex实验中最关键的组成部分是用于表征人类空间视觉的观察者匹配。本文综述了视网膜理论发展起来的实验。它们为预测外观的算法提供了非常具有挑战性的数据集。埃德温·兰德在1963年创造了“视网膜”这个词。他用它来描述理论需要三个独立的颜色通道来解释人类的颜色恒常性。[1]这个词是“视网膜”和“皮层”的缩写。“Retinex”是一种理论上的颜色通道,它通过空间比较来计算亮度感觉,即明暗之间的外观范围。在20世纪50年代末和60年代初,兰德曾热情地尝试过双色投影。[2]到那时,他在许多不同的摄影系统上拥有数百项专利。他很清楚卤化银摄影的可能性和局限性。在他的红光和白光投射实验之前,他接受了对颜色的标准解释。也就是说,颜色是具有不同光谱灵敏度的受体的局部量子捕获的结果。人类的色彩视觉被认为和彩色胶片的行为方式一样;这种颜色是一种局部现象,是由每个非常小的图像段内的光谱响应引起的。在一个小的视网膜区域中,视网膜锥的三联体的量子捕获产生了颜色的外观。一位同事在一次深夜实验中偶然的观察改变了一切。这位同事说,用红白光混合的摄影分色比预期的要多。兰德回答说:“哦,是的,这就是适应。”凌晨两点钟,土地从床上坐起来,说:“适应,什么适应?”他立即回到实验室重复实验。在他的余生中,人类的色彩视觉是他最喜欢的研究领域。兰德究竟看到了什么,那么短暂,让他在半夜里回到实验室?人类三色理论和电影一直是联系在一起的。1802年,当托马斯·杨(Thomas Young)提出人类三色视觉的著名观点时,他在英国皇家学会的同事汉弗莱·戴维(Humphrey Davy)正在研究一种黑白摄影系统。杨是描述这项研究的《机构》杂志的编辑。[3]杨很清楚卤化银对光的反应。那天晚上,兰德意识到,他无法用一种对本地反应灵敏的卤化银系统来制作电影,使其表现出那种视觉效果。这些投影中的颜色外观不能从微小局部区域的受体的量子捕获来理解。人类的颜色外观是根本不同的。控制色彩感觉的是空间比较。卤化银薄膜在非常小的区域使用量子捕获,其中包括所有光敏颗粒的一小部分。远处的物体无法影响胶片对每个微小片段的量子捕捉的反应。图1显示了人类的视觉通路,它始于位于视网膜锥体和杆状受体远端尖端的视觉色素(红色椭圆)。这些视觉色素的量子捕获引发了对光的光谱响应。受体只对视网膜上的图像做出第一反应。外观是沿整个视觉通路进行空间加工的结果。图1所示。视觉路径中空间比较的许多阶段的说明。John Dowling通过描述复杂的视网膜空间相互作用,极大地扩展了Hecht和Wald的工作。[4]Berson最近发现黑视素和光色素在神经节细胞中的空间调节作用。[5]1953年,Kuffler[6]和Barlow[7]发现视神经的神经节细胞进行空间比较。Hubel和Wiesel [8], DeValois[9]在皮层中发现了空间比较细胞。Semir Zeki[10]在V4皮质细胞中发现了颜色恒定细胞。在过去的80年里,人类视觉通路研究的主要主题是在视觉通路的每个阶段记录人类的空间机制。的水平。视觉是一个空间过程。1974年,兰德在他的《星期五晚上在皇家学会的演讲》中写道:“这篇演讲是关于一种普遍未被认识到的动物感官——比例意义。 这是理性的意义,它处理到达我们眼睛的辐射,以这样一种方式发现物体与落在它们身上的辐射有关的恒定特性。[11]图2展示了围绕“Lightness and Retinex”这篇文章的论文。使用参考文献[12]下载并提供论文链接。1971年土地和麦凯恩指定1983年土地1986年土地1970年麦肯,土地,Tatnall坡度•74amcanns .pdf•75savoymcancn .pdf•78cMcCann等。pdf•78a麦肯,pdf•78bSavoy.pdf•80McCannHall.pdf 1971年Horn 1976年麦肯,麦基,泰勒1977年土地科学美国2012年麦肯,帕拉曼,里兹1978年土地,皇家研究所1970年土地,法拉利,卡根,麦肯重置1968年土地。艾夫斯奖牌地址1968 Land, McCann 1980 Frankle, McCann 2001, Sobol, McCann HP相机1999,McCann Hubel色域Retinex 1972 Stockham空间滤波器米兰Retinex 1973 McCann 1999 McCann 2004 McCann Retinex @ 40
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Retinex Algorithms: Many spatial processes used to solve many different problems
There are many different Retinex algorithms. They make different assumptions, and attempt to solve different problems. They have different goals, ground truths and output results. This “Retinex at 50 Workshop” session compares the variety of Retinex algorithms, along with their goals, ground truths that measure the success of their results. All Retinex algorithms use spatial comparisons to calculate the appearances of the entire scene. All Retinex algorithms need observer data to quantify human vision, so as to evaluate their accuracy. The most critical component of all Retinex experiments is the observer matches used to characterize human spatial vision. This paper reviews the experiments that have evolved as a result of Retinex Theory. They provide a very challenging data set for algorithms that predict appearance. Introduction Edwin Land coined the word Retinex in 1963. He used it to describe the theoretical need for three independent color channels to explain human color constancy.[1] The word was a contraction of “retina” and “cortex”. A “Retinex” is a theoretical color channel that makes spatial comparisons so as to calculate lightness sensations, namely the range of appearances between light and dark. Land had enthusiastically experimented with two-color projections in the late 1950’s and early 60’s.[2] By that time, he had hundreds of patents on many different photographic systems. He was well aware of the possibilities, and limitations, of silver halide photography. Before his Red and White light projection experiments, he accepted the standard explanation of color. Namely, color was the result of the local quanta catches of receptors with different spectral sensitivities. Human color vision was thought to behave the way that color film did; in that color was a local phenomenon that resulted from spectral responses within each very small image segment. The quanta catches of the triplet of retinal cones in a small retinal region generated color appearances. An accidental observation made a colleague in a late-night experiment changed all. The colleague remarked that there was more color than expected from mixtures of photographic separations using red and white lights. Land responded: “ Oh yes, that is adaptation.” At two o’clock in the morning, Land sat up in bed, and said : “Adaptation, what adaptation?” He immediately returned to the lab to repeat the experiment. For the rest of his life, human color vision was a favorite research area. What was it that Land had seen, so briefly, that made him return to the lab in the middle of the night? Human Trichromatic Color Theory and film have always been linked. When Thomas Young made his famous suggestion of human trichromacy in 1802, his colleague at the Royal Institution, Humphrey Davy, was studying a black and white photographic system. Young was the editor of the Institutions journal that described the work.[3] Young was well aware of silver halide’s response to light. That night, Land realized there was nothing he could do with a locally-responsive silver-halide system to make film behave the way that vision did. The color appearances in those projections could not be understood from the quanta catches of receptors in a tiny local region. Human color appearances are fundamentally different. It is spatial comparisons that control color sensations. Silver halide film uses quanta catches in a very small area which includes a small fraction of all the light-sensitive grains. Distant objects cannot influence the film’s response to its quanta catch of each tiny segment. Figure 1 illustrates the human visual pathway that begins with the visual pigments located in the distal tips of the cone and rod receptors in the retina (red ellipse). The quanta catch of these visual pigments initiates the spectral response to light. The receptors provide only the first response to the image on the retina. Appearance is the result of spatial processing along the entire visual pathway. Figure 1. Illustration of the many stages of spatial comparisons in the visual pathway. John Dowling, greatly expanded the work of Hecht and Wald, by describing the complex retinal spatial interactions.[4] Berson has recently shown spatial modulation from Melanopsin photopigment in ganglion cells.[5] In 1953, Kuffler [6] and Barlow [7] showed ganglion cells in the optic nerve make spatial comparisons. Hubel and Wiesel [8], DeValois [9] found spatial comparison cells in the cortex. Semir Zeki [10] found color constancy cells in V4 cortical cells. The dominant theme in research on the human visual pathway over the past 80 years has been the documentation of human spatial mechanisms at every stage along the visual pathway. level. Vision is a spatial process. Vision’s Ratio-making Sense In 1974 Land wrote in his Friday Evening Discourse at the Royal Institution: “This Discourse is about a generally unrecognized animal sense-the ratio-making sense. It is the ratiomaking sense which processes the radiation reaching our eyes in such a way as to discover the constant properties of objects in relation to the radiation falling on them.”[11] Figure 2 illustrated the papers surrounding the “Lightness and Retinex” article.Use reference [12] for download with links to papers. 1971 Land, & McCann Designator 1983 Land 1986 Land 1970 McCann, Land, Tatnall Gradients • 74aMcCanns.pdf • 75SavoyMcCann.pdf • 78cMcCann et al.pdf • 78a McCann.pdf • 78bSavoy.pdf • 80McCannHall.pdf 1971 Horn 1976 McCann, McKee,Taylor 1977 Land Sci Amer 2012 McCann, Parraman, Rizzi 1978 Land, Royal Institute 1970 Land, Ferrari, Kagan, McCann Reset 1968 Land. Ives Medal Address 1968 Land, McCann 1980 Frankle, McCann 2001, Sobol, McCann HP camera 1999, McCann, Hubel Gamut Retinex 1972 Stockham Spatial Filters Milano Retinex 1973 McCann 1999 McCann 2004 McCann Retinex @ 40
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The Role of Lightness Perception in Determining the Perceived Contrast of Real World Scenes The Oriented Difference-of-Gaussians Model of Brightness Perception Designator Retinex, Milano Retinex and the locality issue A generalized white-patch model for fast color cast detection in natural images Statistical Aspects of Space Sampling in Retinex models
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