What are the features of an image?

2 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Sivakumaran Chandrasekaran
Sivakumaran Chandrasekaran am 19 Sep. 2012
Kommentiert: Walter Roberson am 1 Nov. 2016
I need to find the features of the given input image and i need to find the matrices present in the image. Then i need to apply neural network to it. How to do it?

Akzeptierte Antwort

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 20 Sep. 2012
Basically, anything you can compute using the information in the image qualifies as a "feature" of the image. Average brightness? It's a feature. Third moment of the Knight's Tour of the image? It's a feature. MD-5 hash of the four corner pixels? It's a feature.
How many features does an image have? Answer: an infinite number.
How many useful features does an image have? No-one knows, and the number is "unknowable" at this time. Quite possibly infinite.
Which features should you use for your purposes? You need to experiment. I would not advise looking for the "best" set of features, by the way: a better feature set is likely to be found within a few hundred years at most.
  1 Kommentar
abinaya sangi
abinaya sangi am 22 Feb. 2016
http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/44429-knights-tour. I have taken coding from the above link.could you help me to do reverse of knight's tour of the same program?

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Weitere Antworten (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 19 Sep. 2012
You'd have to use image processing. So that answers the first question.
For the second question, I don't use neural networks so I can't answer that question with as much authority, but I guess you'd use the Neural Network Toolbox to create a neural network, and send your image into it.

WangKan
WangKan am 1 Nov. 2016
Is that means that we need to extract proper features according to our purpose? Thank you for your time!
  2 Kommentare
Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 1 Nov. 2016
Yes.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 1 Nov. 2016
Yes. And the features that turn out to be useful for one purpose might not be the same as for another purpose.
In my experience, it is difficult to predict which features will turn out to be most "explanatory" for any particular goal. A number of times it turned out that the best feature was the relative height of two obscure chemical peaks in the Magnetic Resonance Spectrometry readings, reflecting a biological process that had not been previously explored.

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by