An enhancement to SIFT-based techniques for image registration
- Authors: Hossain, Tanvir , Teng, Shyh , Lu, Guojun , Lackmann, Martin
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Proceedings of the 2010 Digital Image Computing: Techniques and Applications p. 166-171
- Full Text: false
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- Description: Symmetric-SIFT is a recently proposed local technique used for registering multimodal images. It is based on a well-known general image registration technique named Scale Invariant Feature Transform (SIFT). Symmetric SIFT makes use of the gradient magnitude information at the image's key regions to build the descriptors. In this paper, we highlight an issue with how the magnitude information is used in this process. This issue may result in similar descriptors being built to represent regions in images that are visually different. To address this issue, we have proposed two new strategies for weighting the descriptors. Our experimental results show that Symmetric-SIFT descriptors built using our proposed strategies can lead to better registration accuracy than descriptors built using the original Symmetric-SIFT technique. The issue highlighted and the two strategies proposed are also applicable to the general SIFT technique.
Multimodal image registration technique based on improved local feature descriptors
- Authors: Teng, Shyh , Hossain, Tanvir , Lu, Guojun
- Date: 2015
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Electronic Imaging Vol. 24, no. 1 (2015), p.
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- Description: Multimodal image registration has received significant research attention over the past decade, and the majority of the techniques are global in nature. Although local techniques are widely used for general image registration, there are only limited studies on them for multimodal image registration. Scale invariant feature transform (SIFT) is a well-known general image registration technique. However, SIFT descriptors are not invariant to multimodality. We propose a SIFT-based technique that is modality invariant and still retains the strengths of local techniques. Moreover, our proposed histogram weighting strategies also improve the accuracy of descriptor matching, which is an important image registration step. As a result, our proposed strategies can not only improve the multimodal registration accuracy but also have the potential to improve the performance of all SIFT-based applications, e.g., general image registration and object recognition.