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==<center>Image Blending</center>==
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<center>[[User:Green26|(alec green)]]</center>
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Images implicitly demonstrating how humans vision system perceives different ways of interlacing two distinct images.  Pictures are displayed at full resolution here to avoid aliasing effects due to internet browser.  OpenCV used to access images at pixel level.
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==[1] :: Alternating Pixels, with Aligned Columns==
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[[image:Alternating_columns.PNG]]
 
[[image:Alternating_columns.PNG]]
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[[image:Alternating_columns_zoom.PNG]]
 
[[image:Alternating_columns_zoom.PNG]]
  
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----
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==[2] :: Alternating Pixels, with Misaligned Columns==
  
 
[[image:Alternating_pixels.PNG]]
 
[[image:Alternating_pixels.PNG]]
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[[image:Alternating_pixels_zoom.PNG]]
 
[[image:Alternating_pixels_zoom.PNG]]
  
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----
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==[3] :: Alpha Blending==
  
 
[[image:Alpha_blending.PNG]]
 
[[image:Alpha_blending.PNG]]
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[[image:Alpha_blending_zoom.PNG]]
 
[[image:Alpha_blending_zoom.PNG]]

Revision as of 13:04, 13 February 2013

Image Blending

(alec green)

Images implicitly demonstrating how humans vision system perceives different ways of interlacing two distinct images. Pictures are displayed at full resolution here to avoid aliasing effects due to internet browser. OpenCV used to access images at pixel level.


[1] :: Alternating Pixels, with Aligned Columns

Alternating columns.PNG

Alternating columns zoom.PNG


[2] :: Alternating Pixels, with Misaligned Columns

Alternating pixels.PNG

Alternating pixels zoom.PNG


[3] :: Alpha Blending

Alpha blending.PNG

Alpha blending zoom.PNG

Alumni Liaison

Ph.D. on Applied Mathematics in Aug 2007. Involved on applications of image super-resolution to electron microscopy

Francisco Blanco-Silva