Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10326279 | Neural Networks | 2005 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Filling-in models were successful in predicting psychophysical data for brightness perception. Nevertheless, their suitability for real-world image processing has never been examined. A unified architecture for both predicting psychophysical data and real-world image processing would constitute a powerful theory for early visual information processing. As a first contribution of the present paper, we identified three principal problems with current filling-in architectures, which hamper the goal of having such a unified architecture. To overcome these problems we propose an advance to filling-in theory, called BEATS filling-in, which is based on a novel nonlinear diffusion operator. BEATS filling-in furthermore introduces novel boundary structures. We compare, by means of simulation studies with real-world images, the performance of BEATS filling-in with the recently proposed confidence-based filling-in. As a second contribution we propose a novel mechanism for encoding luminance information in contrast responses ('multiplex contrasts'), which is based on recent neurophysiological findings. Again, by simulations, we show that 'multiplex contrasts' at a single, high-resolution filter scale are sufficient for recovering absolute luminance levels. Hence, 'multiplex contrasts' represent a novel theory addressing how the brain encodes and decodes luminance information.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Artificial Intelligence
Authors
Matthias S. Keil, Gabriel Cristóbal, Thorsten Hansen, Heiko Neumann,