?? phasesym.m
字號(hào):
% PHASESYM - Function for computing phase symmetry on an image.%% This function calculates the phase symmetry of points in an image.% This is a contrast invariant measure of symmetry. This function can be% used as a line and blob detector. The greyscale 'polarity' of the lines% that you want to find can be specified.%% There are potentially many arguments, here is the full usage:%% [phaseSym, orientation, totalEnergy] = ...% phasesym(im, nscale, norient, minWaveLength, mult, ...% sigmaOnf, dThetaOnSigma, k, polarity)%% However, apart from the image, all parameters have defaults and the% usage can be as simple as:%% phaseSym = phasesym(im);% % Arguments:% Default values Description%% nscale 5 - Number of wavelet scales, try values 3-6% norient 6 - Number of filter orientations.% minWaveLength 3 - Wavelength of smallest scale filter.% mult 2.1 - Scaling factor between successive filters.% sigmaOnf 0.55 - Ratio of the standard deviation of the Gaussian % describing the log Gabor filter's transfer function % in the frequency domain to the filter center frequency.% dThetaOnSigma 1.2 - Ratio of angular interval between filter orientations% and the standard deviation of the angular Gaussian% function used to construct filters in the% freq. plane.% k 2.0 - No of standard deviations of the noise energy beyond% the mean at which we set the noise threshold point.% You may want to vary this up to a value of 10 or% 20 for noisy images % polarity 0 - Controls 'polarity' of symmetry features to find.% 1 - just return 'bright' points% -1 - just return 'dark' points% 0 - return bright and dark points.%% Return values:% phaseSym - Phase symmetry image (values between 0 and 1).% orientation - Orientation image. Orientation in which local% symmetry energy is a maximum, in degrees% (0-180), angles positive anti-clockwise.% totalEnergy - Un-normalised raw symmetry energy which may be% more to your liking.%%% Notes on specifying parameters: %% The parameters can be specified as a full list eg.% >> phaseSym = phasesym(im, 5, 6, 3, 2.5, 0.55, 1.2, 2.0, 0);%% or as a partial list with unspecified parameters taking on default values% >> phaseSym = phasesym(im, 5, 6, 3);%% or as a partial list of parameters followed by some parameters specified via a% keyword-value pair, remaining parameters are set to defaults, for example:% >> phaseSym = phasesym(im, 5, 6, 3, 'polarity',-1, 'k', 2.5);% % The convolutions are done via the FFT. Many of the parameters relate to the% specification of the filters in the frequency plane. The values do not seem% to be very critical and the defaults are usually fine. You may want to% experiment with the values of 'nscales' and 'k', the noise compensation factor.%% Notes on filter settings to obtain even coverage of the spectrum% dthetaOnSigma 1.2 norient 6% sigmaOnf .85 mult 1.3% sigmaOnf .75 mult 1.6 (filter bandwidth ~1 octave)% sigmaOnf .65 mult 2.1 % sigmaOnf .55 mult 3 (filter bandwidth ~2 octaves)%% For maximum speed the input image should have dimensions that correspond to% powers of 2, but the code will operate on images of arbitrary size.%% See Also: PHASECONG, PHASECONG2, GABORCONVOLVE, PLOTGABORFILTERS% References:% Peter Kovesi, "Symmetry and Asymmetry From Local Phase" AI'97, Tenth% Australian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence. 2 - 4 December% 1997. http://www.cs.uwa.edu.au/pub/robvis/papers/pk/ai97.ps.gz.%% Peter Kovesi, "Image Features From Phase Congruency". Videre: A% Journal of Computer Vision Research. MIT Press. Volume 1, Number 3,% Summer 1999 http://mitpress.mit.edu/e-journals/Videre/001/v13.html% April 1996 Original Version written % August 1998 Noise compensation corrected. % October 1998 Noise compensation corrected. - Again!!!% September 1999 Modified to operate on non-square images of arbitrary size. % February 2001 Specialised from phasecong.m to calculate phase symmetry % July 2005 Better argument handling + general cleanup and speed improvements% August 2005 Made Octave compatible.% January 2007 Small correction and cleanup of radius calculation for odd% image sizes.% Copyright (c) 1996-2005 Peter Kovesi% School of Computer Science & Software Engineering% The University of Western Australia% http://www.csse.uwa.edu.au/% % Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy% of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal% in the Software without restriction, subject to the following conditions:% % The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all% copies or substantial portions of the Software.% % The software is provided "as is", without warranty of any kind.function[phaseSym, orientation, totalEnergy] = phasesym(varargin) % Get arguments and/or default values [im, nscale, norient, minWaveLength, mult, sigmaOnf, dThetaOnSigma,k, ... polarity] = checkargs(varargin(:)); Octave = exist('OCTAVE_VERSION') ~= 0; % Are we running under Octave? epsilon = .0001; % Used to prevent division by zero. % Calculate the standard deviation of the angular Gaussian function % used to construct filters in the frequency plane. thetaSigma = pi/norient/dThetaOnSigma; [rows,cols] = size(im); imagefft = fft2(im); % Fourier transform of image zero = zeros(rows,cols); totalEnergy = zero; % Matrix for accumulating weighted phase % congruency values (energy). totalSumAn = zero; % Matrix for accumulating filter response % amplitude values. orientation = zero; % Matrix storing orientation with greatest % energy for each pixel. estMeanE2n = []; EO = cell(nscale, norient); % Cell array of convolution results ifftFilterArray = cell(1, nscale); % Cell array of inverse FFTs of filters % Pre-compute some stuff to speed up filter construction % Set up X and Y matrices with ranges normalised to +/- 0.5 % The following code adjusts things appropriately for odd and even values % of rows and columns. if mod(cols,2) xrange = [-(cols-1)/2:(cols-1)/2]/(cols-1); else xrange = [-cols/2:(cols/2-1)]/cols; end if mod(rows,2) yrange = [-(rows-1)/2:(rows-1)/2]/(rows-1); else yrange = [-rows/2:(rows/2-1)]/rows; end [x,y] = meshgrid(xrange, yrange); radius = sqrt(x.^2 + y.^2); % Matrix values contain *normalised* radius from centre. theta = atan2(-y,x); % Matrix values contain polar angle. % (note -ve y is used to give +ve % anti-clockwise angles) radius = ifftshift(radius); % Quadrant shift radius and theta so that filters theta = ifftshift(theta); % are constructed with 0 frequency at the corners. radius(1,1) = 1; % Get rid of the 0 radius value at the 0 % frequency point (now at top-left corner) % so that taking the log of the radius will % not cause trouble. sintheta = sin(theta); costheta = cos(theta); clear x; clear y; clear theta; % save a little memory % Filters are constructed in terms of two components. % 1) The radial component, which controls the frequency band that the filter % responds to % 2) The angular component, which controls the orientation that the filter % responds to. % The two components are multiplied together to construct the overall filter. % Construct the radial filter components... % First construct a low-pass filter that is as large as possible, yet falls % away to zero at the boundaries. All log Gabor filters are multiplied by % this to ensure no extra frequencies at the 'corners' of the FFT are % incorporated as this seems to upset the normalisation process when % calculating phase congrunecy. lp = lowpassfilter([rows,cols],.4,10); % Radius .4, 'sharpness' 10 logGabor = cell(1,nscale); for s = 1:nscale wavelength = minWaveLength*mult^(s-1); fo = 1.0/wavelength; % Centre frequency of filter. logGabor{s} = exp((-(log(radius/fo)).^2) / (2 * log(sigmaOnf)^2)); logGabor{s} = logGabor{s}.*lp; % Apply low-pass filter logGabor{s}(1,1) = 0; % Set the value at the 0 frequency point of the filter % back to zero (undo the radius fudge). end % Then construct the angular filter components... spread = cell(1,norient); for o = 1:norient angl = (o-1)*pi/norient; % Filter angle. % For each point in the filter matrix calculate the angular distance from % the specified filter orientation. To overcome the angular wrap-around % problem sine difference and cosine difference values are first computed % and then the atan2 function is used to determine angular distance. ds = sintheta * cos(angl) - costheta * sin(angl); % Difference in sine. dc = costheta * cos(angl) + sintheta * sin(angl); % Difference in cosine. dtheta = abs(atan2(ds,dc)); % Absolute angular distance. spread{o} = exp((-dtheta.^2) / (2 * thetaSigma^2)); % Calculate the % angular filter component. end % The main loop... for o = 1:norient, % For each orientation. fprintf('Processing orientation %d \r', o); if Octave fflush(1); end sumAn_ThisOrient = zero; Energy_ThisOrient = zero; for s = 1:nscale, % For each scale. filter = logGabor{s} .* spread{o}; % Multiply radial and angular % components to get filter.
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