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Lessons from biological processing of image texture

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Authors

Maddess, Ted
Nagai, Yoshinori

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Elsevier

Abstract

When designing artificial vision systems, it may be useful to examine the solutions 0.5 billion years of biological evolution have produced. Recent studies of human vision; studies of macaque visual cortical function; and behavioural studies of bee vision, all indicate that different species have evolved related approaches for discriminating image textures. This common strategy uses short-range 4th-order spatial correlations. Isotrigon textures, ensemble averages of which have 3rd-order correlation functions that are equal to 0, are useful for studying this sense. Recent results from humans and bees, and methods for producing new isotrigon textures are described.

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International Congress Series 1269 (2004) pp. 26–29

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International Congress Series

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