Gary Meyer - Computer Graphics Research
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Perceptually Based Image Synthesis
The synthesis of realistic images can be facilitated by employing an algorithm that makes image quality judgments while the picture is being created instead of relying upon the user of the software to make these evaluations once the image is complete. In this way it is possible to find the artifacts in a picture as it is being rendered and to invest additional effort on those areas. By targeting the parts of the picture where problems are visible, the overall time necessary to compute the image is reduced. It is also possible to have the algorithm stop when the picture quality has reached a predetermined level. This permits the use of radically different rendering algorithms but still has these methods produce an equivalent visual result.

During the last four years Gary Meyer's perceptually based research effort has successfully applied a visual difference predictor (VDP) to the synthesis of realistic images. A VDP is an image quality tool that takes an original and a defective picture as input and produces a map of the visual differences as output. While his research group did not invent these VDP algorithms, they did implement two of the most important examples, and they performed one of the first evaluative comparisons of these programs (Li, Meyer, and Klassen, 1998). Using the results of this analysis, a computationally efficient version of the most effective VDP was created, and it was extended to handle color. The simplified VDP was inserted into a rendering program where it was used to control a Monte Carlo ray tracing algorithm (Bolin and Meyer, 1998 and 1999). This was the first realistic image synthesis program that could take into account contrast, visual acuity (both monochrome and color), and masking as a picture was being created. It also provided a halting test that was directly related to the perceptibility of artifacts in an image. This work is the culmination of a perceptually based research initiative that extends back several years (Meyer and Liu, 1992; Bolin and Meyer, 1995).



           



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