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Author Maria Vanrell; Jordi Vitria; Xavier Roca edit  openurl
  Title A multidimensional scaling approach to explore the behavior of a texture perception algorithm. Type Journal Article
  Year 1997 Publication Machine Vision and Applications Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 9 Issue Pages 262–271  
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  Notes (down) OR;ISE;CIC;MV Approved no  
  Call Number BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ VVR1997 Serial 35  
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Author Maria Vanrell; Jordi Vitria edit  openurl
  Title Optimal 3x3 decomposable disks for morphological transformations Type Journal
  Year 1997 Publication Image and Vision Computing, 15(2): 845–854 Abbreviated Journal  
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  Notes (down) OR;CIC;MV Approved no  
  Call Number BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ VaV1997c Serial 543  
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Author Xavier Otazu; Oriol Pujol edit  doi
openurl 
  Title Wavelet based approach to cluster analysis. Application on low dimensional data sets Type Journal Article
  Year 2006 Publication Pattern Recognition Letters Abbreviated Journal PRL  
  Volume 27 Issue 14 Pages 1590–1605  
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  Notes (down) MILAB; CIC; HuPBA Approved no  
  Call Number BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ OtP2006 Serial 658  
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Author Jaykishan Patel; Alban Flachot; Javier Vazquez; David H. Brainard; Thomas S. A. Wallis; Marcus A. Brubaker; Richard F. Murray edit  url
openurl 
  Title A deep convolutional neural network trained to infer surface reflectance is deceived by mid-level lightness illusions Type Journal Article
  Year 2023 Publication Journal of Vision Abbreviated Journal JV  
  Volume 23 Issue 9 Pages 4817-4817  
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  Abstract A long-standing view is that lightness illusions are by-products of strategies employed by the visual system to stabilize its perceptual representation of surface reflectance against changes in illumination. Computationally, one such strategy is to infer reflectance from the retinal image, and to base the lightness percept on this inference. CNNs trained to infer reflectance from images have proven successful at solving this problem under limited conditions. To evaluate whether these CNNs provide suitable starting points for computational models of human lightness perception, we tested a state-of-the-art CNN on several lightness illusions, and compared its behaviour to prior measurements of human performance. We trained a CNN (Yu & Smith, 2019) to infer reflectance from luminance images. The network had a 30-layer hourglass architecture with skip connections. We trained the network via supervised learning on 100K images, rendered in Blender, each showing randomly placed geometric objects (surfaces, cubes, tori, etc.), with random Lambertian reflectance patterns (solid, Voronoi, or low-pass noise), under randomized point+ambient lighting. The renderer also provided the ground-truth reflectance images required for training. After training, we applied the network to several visual illusions. These included the argyle, Koffka-Adelson, snake, White’s, checkerboard assimilation, and simultaneous contrast illusions, along with their controls where appropriate. The CNN correctly predicted larger illusions in the argyle, Koffka-Adelson, and snake images than in their controls. It also correctly predicted an assimilation effect in White's illusion. It did not, however, account for the checkerboard assimilation or simultaneous contrast effects. These results are consistent with the view that at least some lightness phenomena are by-products of a rational approach to inferring stable representations of physical properties from intrinsically ambiguous retinal images. Furthermore, they suggest that CNN models may be a promising starting point for new models of human lightness perception.  
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  Notes (down) MACO; CIC Approved no  
  Call Number Admin @ si @ PFV2023 Serial 3890  
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Author Trevor Canham; Javier Vazquez; D Long; Richard F. Murray; Michael S Brown edit   pdf
openurl 
  Title Noise Prism: A Novel Multispectral Visualization Technique Type Journal Article
  Year 2021 Publication 31st Color and Imaging Conference Abbreviated Journal  
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  Abstract A novel technique for visualizing multispectral images is proposed. Inspired by how prisms work, our method spreads spectral information over a chromatic noise pattern. This is accomplished by populating the pattern with pixels representing each measurement band at a count proportional to its measured intensity. The method is advantageous because it allows for lightweight encoding and visualization of spectral information
while maintaining the color appearance of the stimulus. A four alternative forced choice (4AFC) experiment was conducted to validate the method’s information-carrying capacity in displaying metameric stimuli of varying colors and spectral basis functions. The scores ranged from 100% to 20% (less than chance given the 4AFC task), with many conditions falling somewhere in between at statistically significant intervals. Using this data, color and texture difference metrics can be evaluated and optimized to predict the legibility of the visualization technique.
 
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  Notes (down) MACO; CIC Approved no  
  Call Number Admin @ si @ CVL2021 Serial 4000  
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