Book Image

Visual Media Processing Using MATLAB Beginner's Guide

By : George Siogkas
Book Image

Visual Media Processing Using MATLAB Beginner's Guide

By: George Siogkas

Overview of this book

Whether you want to enhance your holiday photographs or make a professional banner image for your website, you need a software tool that offers you quick and easy ways to accomplish it. All-in-one tools tend to be rare, and Matlab is one of the best available.This book is a practical guide full of step-by-step examples and exercises that will enable you to use Matlab as a powerful, complete, and versatile alternative to traditional image and video processing software.You will start off by learning the very basics of grayscale image manipulation in Matlab to master how to analyze 3-dimensional images and videos using the same tool. The methods you learn here are explained and expanded upon so that you gradually reach a more advanced level in Matlab image and video processing. You will be guided through the steps of opening, transforming, and saving images, later to be mixed with advanced masking techniques both in grayscale and in color. More advanced examples of artistic image processing are also provided, like creating panoramic photographs or HDR images. The second part of the book covers video processing techniques and guides you through the processes of creating time-lapse videos from still images, and acquiring, filtering, and saving videos in Matlab. You will learn how to use many useful functions and tools that transform Matlab from a scientific software to a powerful and complete solution for your everyday image and video processing needs.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Visual Media Processing Using MATLAB Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Deinterlacing videos in MATLAB


Now, it is time to visit a very common topic in video processing; video deinterlacing. As you might recall, videos can be split into two categories: interlaced and progressive. The former contain frames with either odd or even rows present, while the latter contain frames with all the rows present. The frame rates of videos do not let the human eye easily distinguish the difference, making interlaced videos a compelling choice when we want to save space.

However, there are cases in which interlacing is visible to the human eye. A common example is still frames from videos that include motion, which exhibit interlacing artifacts. An example of such artifacts is shown in the following example, which is a frame extracted from a driving video (shot from inside a moving vehicle). We have also cropped an area of the image where the interlacing artifacts are more intense, so that you understand the problem even better.

>> A = imread('interlaced.bmp');	   % Load...