Unit I IMAGE FUNDAMENTALS
Across
- 3. System output for a point input; describes blurring.
- 5. The closeness of a processed image to the original.
- 7. Number of bits used to represent each pixel’s intensity.
- 8. Describes blur, noise, or distortions introduced in an image.
- 10. The process by which the human visual system interprets visual information.
- 14. Distortion caused when sampling violates the Nyquist criterion.
- 15. Mapping continuous values to a limited set of discrete levels.
- 16. A comparison between useful signal and unwanted disturbances.
- 18. The improvement of a degraded image using known models.
- 19. The smallest detail an imaging system can distinguish.
- 20. A mathematical operation used to combine image and filter functions.
Down
- 1. The number of intensity changes per unit distance in an image.
- 2. The reaction of the visual system to spatial patterns and intensities.
- 4. Ability of the eye to detect differences between light and dark patterns.
- 6. A measure of average squared difference between original and quantized values.
- 7. The eye’s adjustment to different illumination levels.
- 9. Measures how well an imaging system preserves contrast at different frequencies.
- 11. The measurable amount of light intensity from a surface.
- 12. Minimum sampling frequency needed to avoid aliasing.
- 13. Converting continuous images into discrete grid points.
- 17. Mathematical representation of an image’s intensity function.