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Interpolation Techniques in Image Resampling
Author(s) -
M. Malini,
Meenakshi Patil
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
international journal of engineering and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2227-524X
DOI - 10.14419/ijet.v7i3.34.19383
Subject(s) - image scaling , resampling , artificial intelligence , computer vision , pixel , computer science , interpolation (computer graphics) , image (mathematics) , transformation (genetics) , bicubic interpolation , image warping , pattern recognition (psychology) , image processing , linear interpolation , biochemistry , chemistry , gene
The procedure of converting a sampled image from any coordinate structure to other structure is called Image Resampling. When forgeries are introduced in digital images, generally the operations like rotation, resizing, skewing etc., are included to make it relational with respect to adjacent original area.  So there is a recognizable loss in the quality of the image and it will become an important signature of manipulated images. Hence resampling is the default interpretation present in most of the tamped image. Resampling detection is an attractive standard tool in digital image forensics. Generally resampling objects are not visible to human eye in an altered images but periodic relationships get familiarized in image pixels. Because of it the changes is going to happen in certain characteristics of the image and it is going leaving behind periodical artifacts which are used as fingerprints for the forensics. These periodic interpolation objects present in the intensities of pixels  or other format of data illustration such as DFT, wavelet are the structures which detectors look for in order to decide whether an image, or a part of an image, has endured a geometrical transformation. This serves as an evidence of manipulation or tampering. This paper gives comparative study of different resampling techniques like Cubic Splines, Nearest Neighbor, Cubic convolution and Linear Interpolation, which can be used as detectors for an altered image containing resample portions 

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