Connected Neighbourhood / Regional Maxima - Image Processing
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Hi there,
I am not able to understand how imregionalmax works for finding the regional maxima. Can anybody brief me.!! Mainly not clear about the connected neighbourhood.
Thanks for the time.
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Answers (5)
Harshit
on 7 Nov 2012
Hi Sriram, 8-Connected neighborhood means the pixels in left,right,up,down,left up, left down,up right and down right. It works by finding all the connected component of same intensity say the 3x3 matrix of 22. And then checking if these components have a connectivity with intensity value higher. Connectivity now means connectivity by a single element of the components.
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Andrei Bobrov
on 7 Nov 2012
x=[ 10 10 10 10 10
10 10 10 30 30
10 13 13 10 30
10 13 10 10 10
10 10 10 10 10]
imregionalmax(x,4)
Harshit
on 7 Nov 2012
Hi Sriram, It won't be. You have to see the entire connected component. Look at 3rd column and 3rd row 13 it is connected to 2nd row and 4th column 30 in a 8-neighbor way. So 13 is connected to 30 and so it will become zero.
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Harshit
on 8 Nov 2012
You can look at the source of matlab function itself. It is the most optimized code. Else the logic will be for every pixel check its 8 neighbor. If any of them is bigger store it in a lut such that a(13,10)=1 which means intensity 13 and 10 are connected. In the second iteration just traverse the matrix and delete elements on the basis of lut.
Image Analyst
on 8 Nov 2012
In this case, as with most m-files, the m-file for the function in the toolbox is merely a wrapper for a mex file that does the actual heavy lifting. So you can't see what it does internally. And for this case, it doesn't give a citation to a published article.
Image Analyst
on 7 Nov 2012
Regarding your example: No, the 13's won't be a local max. There's a trail of pixels (equal or higher in values) that connect the 13's to a higher number (30), so none of the 13's will be a regional max. With 8 connected the trail can go up, down, left, right, or diagonally.
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