Digital Cameras - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Digital Cameras

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More green pixels, since human eye is better at resolving green. 22 ... Lots of white, separate by occasional black. 32. Joint Photographic Experts Group ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Digital Cameras


1
Digital Cameras
  • Engineering Math Physics (EMP)
  • Jennifer Rexford
  • http//www.cs.princeton.edu/jrex

2
Image Transmission Over Wireless Networks
  • Image capture and compression
  • Inner-workings of a digital camera
  • Manipulating transforming a matrix of pixels
  • Implementing a variant of JPEG compression
  • Wireless networks
  • Wireless technology
  • Acoustic waves and electrical signals
  • Radios
  • Video over wireless networks
  • Video compression and quality
  • Transmitting video over wireless
  • Controlling a car over a radio link

3
Traditional Photography
  • A chemical process, little changed from 1826
  • Taken in France on a pewter plate
  • with 8-hour exposure

The world's first photograph
4
Image Formation
Digital Camera
Film
Eye
5
Image Formation in a Pinhole Camera
  • Light enters a darkened chamber through pinhole
    opening and forms an image on the further surface

6
Aperture
  • Hole or opening where light enters
  • Or, the diameter of that hole or opening
  • Pupil of the human eye
  • Bright light 1.5 mm diameter
  • Average light 3-4 mm diameter
  • Dim light 8 mm diameter
  • Camera
  • Wider aperture admits more light
  • Though leads to blurriness in theobjects away
    from point of focus

7
Shutter Speed
  • Time for light to enter camera
  • Longer times lead to more light
  • though blurs moving subjects
  • Exposure
  • Total light entering the camera
  • Depends on aperture and shutter speed

8
Digital Photography
  • Digital photography is an electronic process
  • Only widely available in the last ten years
  • Digital cameras now surpass film cameras in sales
  • Polaroid closing its film plants this year

9
Image Formation in a Digital Camera
10V
Photon

?
?
?
?
?
?
?

A sensor converts one kind of energy to another
  • Array of sensors
  • Light-sensitive diodes convert photons to
    electrons
  • Buckets that collect charge in proportion to
    light
  • Each bucket corresponds to a picture element
    (pixel)

10
CCD Charge Coupled Device
CCD sensor
  • Common sensor array used in digital cameras
  • Each capacitor accumulates charge in response to
    light
  • Responds to about 70 of the incident light
  • In contrast, photographic film captures only
    about 2
  • Also widely used in astronomy telescopes

11
Sensor Array Image Sampling
Pixel (Picture Element) single point in a
graphic image
12
Sensor Array Reading Out the Pixels
  • Transfer the charge from one row to the next
  • Transfer charge in the serial register one cell
    at a time
  • Perform digital to analog conversion one cell at
    a time
  • Store digital representation

Digital-to-analog conversion
13
Sensor Array Reading Out the Pixels
14
More Pixels Mean More Detail
1280 x 960
1600 x 1400
640 x 480
15
The 320 x 240hand
The 2272 x 1704hand
16
Representing Color
  • Light receptors in the human eye
  • Rods sensitive in low light, mostly at periphery
    of eye
  • Cones only at higher light levels, provide color
    vision
  • Different types of cones for red, green, and blue
  • RGB color model
  • A color is some combination of red, green, and
    blue
  • Intensity value for each color
  • 0 for no intensity
  • 1 for high intensity
  • Examples
  • Red 1, 0, 0
  • Green 0, 1, 0
  • Yellow 1, 1, 0

17
Representing Image as a 3D Matrix
  • In the lab this week
  • Matlab experiments with digital images
  • Matrix storing color intensities per pixel
  • Row from top to bottom
  • Column from left to right
  • Color red, green, blue
  • Examples
  • M(3,2,1) third row, second column, red intensity
  • M(4,3,2) fourth row, third column, green
    intensity

1
2
3
2
1
18
Limited Granularity of Color
  • Three intensities, one per color
  • Any value between 0 and 1
  • Storing all possible values take a lot of bits
  • E.g., storing 0.368491029692069439604504560106
  • Can a person really differentiate from 0.36849?
  • Limiting the number of intensity settings
  • Eight bits for each color
  • From 00000000 to 11111111
  • With 28 256 values
  • Leading to 24 bits per pixel
  • Red 255, 0, 0
  • Green 0, 255, 0
  • Yellow 255, 255, 0

19
Number of Bits Per Pixel
  • Number of bits per pixel
  • More bits can represent a wider range of colors
  • 24 bits can capture 224 16,777,216 colors
  • Most humans can distinguish around 10 million
    colors

8 bits / pixel / color
4 bits / pixel / color
20
Separate Sensors Per Color
  • Expensive cameras
  • A prism to split the light into three colors
  • Three CCD arrays, one per RGB color

21
Practical Color Sensing Bayer Grid
  • Place a small color filter over each sensor
  • Each cell captures intensity of a single color
  • More green pixels, since human eye is better at
    resolving green

22
Practical Color Sensing Interpolating
  • Challenge inferring what we cant see
  • Estimating pixels we do not know
  • Solution estimate based on neighboring pixels
  • E.g., red for non-red cell averaged from red
    neighbors
  • E.g., blue for non-blue cell averaged from blue
    neighbors

Estimate R and B at the G cells from
neighboring values
23
Interpolation
  • Examples of interpolation
  • Accuracy of interpolation
  • Good in low-contrast areas (neighbors mostly the
    same)
  • Poor with sharp edges (e.g., text)

and
makes
and
makes
and
makes
24
Are More Pixels Always Better?
  • Generally more is better
  • Better resolution of the picture
  • Though at some point humans cant tell the
    difference
  • But, other factors matter as well
  • Sensor size
  • Lens quality
  • Whether Bayer grid is used
  • Problem with too many pixels
  • Very small sensors catch fewer photons
  • Much higher signal-to-noise ratio
  • Plus, more pixels means more storage

25
Digital Images Require a Lot of Storage
  • Three dimensional object
  • Width (e.g., 640 pixels)
  • Height (e.g., 480 pixels)
  • Bits per pixel (e.g., 24-bit color)
  • Storage is the product
  • Pixel width pixel height bits/pixel
  • Divided by 8 to convert from bits to bytes
  • Example sizes
  • 640 x 480 1 Megabyte
  • 800 x 600 1.5 Megabytes
  • 1600 x 1200 6 Megabytes

26
Compression
  • Benefits of reducing the size
  • Consume less storage space and network bandwidth
  • Reduce the time to load, store, and transmit the
    image
  • Redundancy in the image
  • Neighboring pixels often the same, or at least
    similar
  • E.g., the blue sky
  • Human perception factors
  • Human eye is not sensitive to high frequencies

27
Compression Pipeline
  • Sender and receiver must agree
  • Sender/writer compresses the raw data
  • Receiver/reader un-compresses the compressed data
  • Example digital photography

uncompress
compress
27
28
Two Kinds of Compression
  • Lossless
  • Only exploits redundancy in the data
  • So, the data can be reconstructed exactly
  • Necessary for most text documents (e.g., legal
    documents, computer programs, and books)
  • Lossy
  • Exploits both data redundancy and human
    perception
  • So, some of the information is lost forever
  • Acceptable for digital audio, images, and video

28
29
Lossless Huffman Encoding
  • Normal encoding of text
  • Fixed number of bits for each character
  • ASCII with seven bits for each character
  • Allows representation of 27128 characters
  • Use 97 for a, 98 for b, , 122 for z
  • But, some characters occur more often than others
  • Letter a occurs much more often than x
  • Idea assign fewer bits to more-popular symbols
  • Encode a as 000
  • Encode x as 11010111

29
30
Lossless Huffman Encoding
  • Challenge generating an efficient encoding
  • Smaller codes for popular characters
  • Longer codes for unpopular characters

English Text frequency distribution
Morse code
30
31
Lossless Run-Length Encoding
  • Sometimes the same symbol repeats
  • Such as eeeeeee or eeeeetnnnnnn
  • That is, a run of e symbols or a run of n
    symbols
  • Idea capture the symbol only once
  • Count the number of times the symbol occurs
  • Record the symbol and the number of occurrences
  • Examples
  • So, eeeeeee becomes _at_e7
  • So, eeeeetnnnnnn becomes _at_e5t_at_n6
  • Useful for fax machines
  • Lots of white, separate by occasional black

31
32
Joint Photographic Experts Group
  • Starts with an array of pixels in RGB format
  • With one number per pixel for each of the three
    colors
  • And outputs a smaller file with some loss in
    quality
  • Exploits both redundancy and human perception
  • Transforms data to identify parts that humans
    notice less
  • More about transforming the data in Wednesdays
    class

Uncompressed 167 KB
Good quality 46 KB
Poor quality 9 KB
33
Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG)
108 KB
34 KB
Lossy compression
8 KB
33
34
New Era of Computational Photography
  • Beyond manual editing of photographs
  • E.g., to crop, lighten/darken, sharpen edges,
    etc.
  • Post-processing of a single photography
  • De-blur photos marred by camera shake
  • Changing the depth of field or vantage point
  • Combining multiple pictures
  • Creating three-dimensional representations
  • Stitching together photos for a larger view
  • Creating a higher-resolution picture of a single
    scene
  • ltInsert your idea heregt

http//www.news.com/8301-13580_3-9882019-39.html
35
Conclusion
  • Conversion of information
  • Light (photons) and a optical lens
  • Charge (electrons) and electronic devices
  • Bits (0s and 1s) and a digital computer
  • Combines many disciplines
  • Physics lenses and light
  • Electrical engineering charge coupled device
  • Computer science manipulating digital
    representations
  • Mathematics compression algorithms
  • Psychology/biology human perception
  • Next class compression algorithms
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