Paper
15 April 1996 Noise regeneration in compressed x-ray images
Marcel M. Breeuwer, Peter J. van Otterloo
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Almost all present-day lossy image-compression methods are so-called waveform coders, i.e. they attempt to approximate the original image waveform as closely as possible with the available number of bits. At medium-to-low compression ratios this can usually be achieved quite well, but at high compression ratios clearly visible artefacts may be introduced into the coded images. During the compression of medical x-ray images we noticed that the data that suffer most from a high degree of compression are the noise-like components present in these images. The loss of these components is found to depreciate the perceived image quality. This paper proposes a method for modeling the noise components removed due to lossy compression and for regenerating these components during the decompression of the image.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Marcel M. Breeuwer and Peter J. van Otterloo "Noise regeneration in compressed x-ray images", Proc. SPIE 2707, Medical Imaging 1996: Image Display, (15 April 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.238453
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KEYWORDS
Image compression

Computer programming

Quantization

X-rays

X-ray imaging

Interference (communication)

Medical imaging

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