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      Fractal-Based Description of Natural Scenes

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          Abstract

          This paper addresses the problems of 1) representing natural shapes such as mountains, trees, and clouds, and 2) computing their description from image data. To solve these problems, we must be able to relate natural surfaces to their images; this requires a good model of natural surface shapes. Fractal functions are a good choice for modeling 3-D natural surfaces because 1) many physical processes produce a fractal surface shape, 2) fractals are widely used as a graphics tool for generating natural-looking shapes, and 3) a survey of natural imagery has shown that the 3-D fractal surface model, transformed by the image formation process, furnishes an accurate description of both textured and shaded image regions. The 3-D fractal model provides a characterization of 3-D surfaces and their images for which the appropriateness of the model is verifiable. Furthermore, this characterization is stable over transformations of scale and linear transforms of intensity. The 3-D fractal model has been successfully applied to the problems of 1) texture segmentation and classification, 2) estimation of 3-D shape information, and 3) distinguishing between perceptually ``smooth'' and perceptually ``textured'' surfaces in the scene.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
          IEEE Trans. Pattern Anal. Mach. Intell.
          Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
          0162-8828
          November 1984
          November 1984
          : PAMI-6
          : 6
          : 661-674
          Article
          10.1109/TPAMI.1984.4767591
          22499648
          36a8348a-ed19-4a81-b51a-f734c07c7863
          © 1984
          History

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