how to show 20 images in single figure using matlab ?

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Himank Airon
Himank Airon am 8 Jul. 2015
I have 20 images and I want to show them in single figure in a single axes . I am very new to matlab and I have to get this thing done by tomorrow and so I don't have time to learn to do that. I basically want to ask is when a single image is displayed it is shown with x and y axis (two directions) and if I rotate the figure using 'Rotate 3D' button , I am able to see that this image is occupying z = 0 plane . What I want is that I can display 20 images , on different xy planes , like image1 on z = 0 plane , image2 on z = 1 plane and so on ... How to achieve this please help me out.

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 8 Jul. 2015
You can create a single 3D volumetric image like you said (same image at different z levels) using cat():
image3D = cat(3, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1, image1);
To display them, you can use slice() to take cutaway views, or extract slices parallel to the x, y, or z axes.
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Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 9 Jul. 2015
Yes, but not very well in MATLAB. MATLAB does not have very good volume visualization capability. It's limited to surface renderings and cutaway views. For the ultimate in volume visualization you'll need to use a program like Avizo. http://www.fei.com/software/avizo3d/
Bjorn Gustavsson
Bjorn Gustavsson am 9 Jul. 2015
Another option for volume rendering software is:

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Weitere Antworten (2)

Alex
Alex am 8 Jul. 2015
Does subplot(n,m,i) help?
  3 Kommentare
Alex
Alex am 8 Jul. 2015
MATLAB doesn't have any function that quickly 'voxel'rize the images. The property ZAxis in functions like image/imagesc/image can't be modified.
Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 8 Jul. 2015
I don't know what 'voxel'rize means but you can create versions/copies of the image at different z levels using cat(), like I did in my answer, or using repmat().

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Steven Lord
Steven Lord am 8 Jul. 2015
Displaying them all in a single axis is going to be messy, I suspect. Try the Image Processing Toolbox function MONTAGE or use SUBPLOT as Alex has suggested. If those don't do what you want, you will need to "pack" the images together and then call IMAGE or IMAGESC or something similar. I don't have an example of how to do this; you would need to determine the best approach for your data, based on their sizes, color ranges, etc.
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Himank Airon
Himank Airon am 8 Jul. 2015
please refer to more clear statement of my problem in comments of Alex's answer . please help me in any way you can ?

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