Paper
1 November 1991 Multiresponse imaging system design for improved resolution
Rachel Alter-Gartenberg, Carl L. Fales, Friedrich O. Huck, Zia-ur Rahman, Stephen E. Reichenbach
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Multiresponse imaging is a process that acquires A images, each with a different optical response, and reassembles them into a single image with an improved resolution that can approach \/y/A times the photodetector-array sampling lattice. Our goals are to optimize the performance of this process in terms of the resolution and fidelity of the restored image and to assess the amount of information required to do so. The theoretical approach is based on the extension of both image- restoration and rate-distortion theories from their traditional realm of signal processing to image processing which includes image gathering and display.
© (1991) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Rachel Alter-Gartenberg, Carl L. Fales, Friedrich O. Huck, Zia-ur Rahman, and Stephen E. Reichenbach "Multiresponse imaging system design for improved resolution", Proc. SPIE 1605, Visual Communications and Image Processing '91: Visual Communication, (1 November 1991); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.50223
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KEYWORDS
Signal to noise ratio

Image processing

Visual communications

Image resolution

Signal processing

Visualization

Imaging systems

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