Depth-of-focus imaging process method

4661986
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Inventors

Adelson, Edward H.

Application #

611962

Filed

May-18-1984

Published

Apr-28-1987

Current US Class

348/356
382/154
382/255

International Classes

G06K 009/36

Field of Search

382/17 382/41 382/49 358/182 358/183 358/185 358/227 358/3 358/88 358/160 358/166 354/400 354/407 354/408

Assignee

RCA Corporation (Princeton, NJ)

Examiners

Boudreau; Leo H.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Tripoli; Joseph S., Seligsohn; George J.

US Patent References

4523230   System for coring a...
4561747   Auto-focusing method
4584704   Spatial imaging sy...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

"Optional Sectioning," by Kenneth R. Castleman, Digital Image Processing, 351-379, Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1979. "Segmentation and Estimation of Image Region Properties through Cooperative Hierarchial Computation," by Peter J. Burt, et al., IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, vol. SMC-11, No. 12, 802-809, Dec., 1981. "The Laplacian Pyramid as a Compact Image Code," by Peter J. Burt, et al., IEEE Transactions on Communications, vol. COM-31, No. 4, 532-540, Apr. 1983. Fast Algorithms for Estimating Local Image Properties," by Peter J. Burt, Computer Vision, Graphics, and Image Processing 21, 368-382 (1983). "Tree and Pyramid Structures for Coding Hexagonally Sampled Binary Images," by Peter J. Burt, Computer Graphics and Image Processing 14, 271-280 (1980). "Pyramind-based Extraction of Local Image Features with Applications to Motion and Texture Analysis," by Peter J. Burt, SPIE, vol. 360, 114-124. "Fast Filter Transforms for Image Processing," by Peter J. Burt, Computer Graphics and Image Processing 16, 20-51, 1981. "A Multiresolution Spline with Applications to Image Mosaics," by Peter J. Burt, et al., Image Processing Laboratory, Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering Department, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Jun. 1983. "The Pyramind as a Structure for Efficient Computation," by Peter J. Burt, Image Processing Laboratory, Electrical and Systems Engineering Department, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Jul. 1982.

Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
An improved-focus 2-D image is derived from an assemblage of M separately focused 2-D images of the same 3-D scene by (1) employing the Burt Pyramid image analyzing technique to separately analyze each of the M separately focused images into N similar sets of pixel samples, (2) selecting, on a pixel-by-pixel basis from each group of M corresponding sets of the assemblage, the best focused pixel, to derive a single analyzed image of N sets of improved-focus pixels, and (3) employing the Burt Pyramid image synthesizing technique to synthesize the improved-focus 2-D image from the single analyzed image of N sets.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A method for processing M (where M is a first plural integer) two-dimensional images of a given three-dimensional spatial scene, which images are separately focused in the depth dimension, to derive therefrom a single improved-focus two-dimensional image of said given three-dimensional scene, each of said M images being defined by a spatial-frequency spectrum corresponding thereto; said method comprising the steps of:

(a) dividing the respective spatial-frequency spectra of said M two-dimensional images into M substantially similar assemblages of N separate sets of pixel samples having sample levels that vary in height and defining N specified spatial frequency bands (where N is a second plural integer), each of said N separate sets occurring at a sample density that corresponds therewith and the respective sample densities of each individual group of sets that define corresponding ones of said specified bands of said M assmblages being substantially the same as one another;



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

This invention relates to an image-processing method and, more particularly, to an image-processing method for deriving a single improved-focus two-dimensional (2-D) image of a three-dimensional (3-D) scene from a plurality of separately-focused 2-D images of this 3-D scene.

The term "scene", as used herein, means a particular region of 3-D space including all objects situated within that particular region.

2. Description of the Prior Art

As is known in optics, a pin-hole imaging system has a very deep depth-of-focus (i.e., depth-of-field), but has extremely poor light-gathering properties and poor resolution due to diffraction. Therefore, substantially all imaging is accomplished with lens imaging systems, rather than pin-hole imaging systems.

A large aperture lens (i.e., a lens having large numerical aperture and small F number) has greater light-gathering properties and is capable of providing an image of higher spatial resolution than is a small aperture lens. However, a large aperture lens inherently exhibits a relatively small depth-of-focus. For this reason, it is often not possible to produce a 2-D image of a relatively deep 3-D given scene in which both relatively close and relatively distant objects within the scene appear in good focus in the 2-D image.
 
  A lens system (100) and image plane (104) are used to capture a number of sample images (400) of a three dimensional scene, each sample image (400) corresponding...  A detection system (10) utilising projected light (18, 20) viewed through an appropriately placed camera (22) detects variations in surface height (26)....