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Linear Chromatic Adaptation Transform Based on Delaunay Triangulation
Author(s) -
Rok Kreslin,
Pilar M. Calvo,
Luis Galo Corzo,
Peter Peer
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
mathematical problems in engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.262
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1026-7077
pISSN - 1024-123X
DOI - 10.1155/2014/760123
Subject(s) - delaunay triangulation , artificial intelligence , computer vision , chromatic adaptation , standard illuminant , color balance , mathematics , affine transformation , triangulation , computer science , color image , color difference , color model , transformation matrix , color space , algorithm , image (mathematics) , image processing , enhanced data rates for gsm evolution , geometry , physics , kinematics , classical mechanics
Computer vision algorithms that use color information require color constant images to operate correctly. Color constancy of the images is usually achieved in two steps: first the illuminant is detected and then image is transformed with the chromatic adaptation transform (CAT). Existing CAT methods use a single transformation matrix for all the colors of the input image. The method proposed in this paper requires multiple corresponding color pairs between source and target illuminants given by patches of the Macbeth color checker. It uses Delaunay triangulation to divide the color gamut of the input image into small triangles. Each color of the input image is associated with the triangle containing the color point and transformed with a full linear model associated with the triangle. Full linear model is used because diagonal models are known to be inaccurate if channel color matching functions do not have narrow peaks. Objective evaluation showed that the proposed method outperforms existing CAT methods by more than 21%; that is, it performs statistically significantly better than other existing methods.

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