Dr. Kevin J. Matherson
R/D Manager at Microsoft Corp
SPIE Involvement:
Editor | Author | Instructor
Publications (1)

Proceedings Article | 28 January 2008 Paper
Proceedings Volume 6808, 680804 (2008) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.768204
KEYWORDS: Cameras, Digital cameras, Visualization, Image processing, Metrology, Standards development, Spatial frequencies, Spatial resolution, Image quality standards, Image resolution

Proceedings Volume Editor (4)

SPIE Conference Volume | 16 March 2015

SPIE Conference Volume | 19 March 2014

SPIE Conference Volume | 26 March 2013

SPIE Conference Volume | 21 January 2013

Conference Committee Involvement (20)
Image Sensors and Imaging Systems 2015
9 February 2015 | San Francisco, California, United States
Digital Photography and Mobile Imaging XI
9 February 2015 | San Francisco, California, United States
SPIE/IS&T Electronic Imaging
8 February 2015 | San Francisco, United States
Image Sensors and Imaging Systems 2014
5 February 2014 | San Francisco, California, United States
Digital Photography X
3 February 2014 | San Francisco, California, United States
Showing 5 of 20 Conference Committees
Course Instructor
SC1058: Image Quality and Evaluation of Cameras In Mobile Devices
Digital and mobile imaging camera system performance is determined by a combination of sensor characteristics, lens characteristics, and image-processing algorithms. As pixel size decreases, sensitivity decreases and noise increases, requiring a more sophisticated noise-reduction algorithm to obtain good image quality. Furthermore, small pixels require high-resolution optics with low chromatic aberration and very small blur circles. Ultimately, there is a tradeoff between noise, resolution, sharpness, and the quality of an image. This short course provides an overview of "light in to byte out" issues associated with digital and mobile imaging cameras. The course covers, optics, sensors, image processing, and sources of noise in these cameras, algorithms to reduce it, and different methods of characterization. Although noise is typically measured as a standard deviation in a patch with uniform color, it does not always accurately represent human perception. Based on the "visual noise" algorithm described in ISO 15739, an improved approach for measuring noise as an image quality aspect will be demonstrated. The course shows a way to optimize image quality by balancing the tradeoff between noise and resolution. All methods discussed will use images as examples.
SC1336: Current Trends in Miniature Camera Technology from Visible to Infrared: Optimization for Performance, Size, and Cost
Digital camera systems have been an essential part of daily life since their development a little over two decades ago. While the general concepts behind digital still imaging are well known and documented, questions regarding the architecture and performance tradeoffs of compact camera modules are less widely known. For example, how can one minimize the size, weight, and power of a camera module while still meeting all image quality performance requirements? This course will provide participants with a working knowledge of compact camera module design, its challenges, and the associated engineering required to develop solutions for a particular application. The information in this course will help both novice and experienced engineers understand component tradeoffs and selection to minimize cost and risk. The first half of this day-long course provides background information on sources, sensor operation and selection, optical system analysis, fixed and variable focus considerations, an overview of image processing, as well as calibration considerations, ending with a discussion on benchmarking and test. Overall, the emphasis will be geared towards development with an eye on manufacturability. The second half of this course will cover applications using the material learned in the first half of the course. Selected applications will use examples from mobile imaging, autonomous vehicles, drones, AR/VR, and healthcare covering the spectral regions of visible to longwave thermal (8-12 um). The course is structured in such a way to provide key information about the design of compact camera modules using a variety of camera module development goals. During the second half of the course, specific choices of camera components will be explained based on the imposition of end-user specifications and how that impacts sensor selection, lens size, lens performance, and the image processor and electronics choices.
SC753: The Image Pipeline and How It Influences Quality Measurements Based on Existing ISO Standards
When a digital image is captured using a digital still camera, DSC, it needs to be processed. For consumer cameras this processing is done within the camera and covers various steps like dark current subtraction, flare compensation, shading and color compensation, demosaicing, white balancing, tonal and color correction, sharpening, and compression. All of these steps have a significant influence on image quality so it is important to know how image quality can be measured and what standardized methods exist. The course provides the basic methods for each step of the imaging pipeline. While we run several images through a sample pipeline we will alter the algorithms to discover the visual differences and the differences in the measured values using the various test methods. This helps to understand the process and provides a lot of information on how to increase the over all image quality. The course topics include basic review of the image processing pipeline; explanation of the different steps and their basic algorithms; practical image processing using sample images and software; introduction to image quality analysis; discussion on test scenes and visual image analysis; measurement of different image quality aspects like OECF, Dynamic Range, Noise, Resolution, Color Reproduction; explanation of the available free and commercial software; and demonstration of illuminator, test chart, and software based measurements.
SC871: Noise, Image Processing, and their Influence on Resolution
Digital imaging system resolution is determined by a combination of sensor characteristics, lens characteristics, and image-processing algorithms. As pixel size decreases, sensitivity decreases and noise increases, requiring a more sophisticated noise-reduction algorithm to obtain good image quality. Furthermore, small pixels require high-resolution optics with low chromatic aberration and very small blur circles. Ultimately, there is a tradeoff between noise, resolution, sharpness, and the quality of an image. This short course summarizes the sources of noise, algorithms to reduce it, and different methods of characterization. Although noise is typically measured as a standard deviation in a patch with uniform color, it does not always accurately represent human perception. Based on the "visual noise" algorithm described in ISO 15739, an improved approach for measuring noise as an image quality aspect will be demonstrated. The course shows a way to optimize image quality by balancing the tradeoff between noise and resolution. All methods discussed will use images as examples.
SC870: Color Processing and its Characterisation for Digital Photography
When an image is captured using a digital imaging device, it needs to be rendered. For consumer cameras this processing is done within the camera, and covers various steps like dark current subtraction, flare compensation, shading and color compensation, demosaicing, white balancing, tonal and color correction, sharpening, and compression. All of these steps have a significant influence on image quality, so to design and tune these algorithms it is important to know how image quality can be measured and what standardized methods exist as well as their pros and cons. The course provides the basic methods for all steps of the imaging pipeline which involve color. Participants will get to examine the basic algorithms that exist and evaluate images processed through a sample pipeline. We will see how image data influences color transforms and white balance. This helps to understand the process and provides substantial information on how to increase the overall image quality. Finally, we will look at how non-ideal hardware affects the quality of the output image. Examples include non-ideal spectral filters, sensor crosstalk, spectral responsivity mismatch, etc.
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