8x8 window and finding mean

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med-sweng
med-sweng am 22 Jan. 2013
Say I have a matrix of an image, and I want to do the following:
- Slide an `8x8` window over the matrix - Calculate the mean for each pixel in the matrix
How can I do that in `matlab`, provided that I'm kind of new to coding in matlab.
Thanks.

Antworten (2)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 22 Jan. 2013
Bearbeitet: Walter Roberson am 22 Jan. 2013
See blockproc() or nlfilter()
  2 Kommentare
med-sweng
med-sweng am 22 Jan. 2013
Thanks for your reply. I'm tinking of sliding a window over the pixels. Will the functions you suggested do the work?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 22 Jan. 2013
You would probably find nlfilter() easier to use for this task, but it does have the restriction that the image must be grayscale (well, really, that the array must be 2D rather than RGB which is 3D). It is, though, not immediately clear what "mean" of pixels means for RGB.

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 23 Jan. 2013
You can do
meanImage = conv2(grayImage, ones(8)/64, 'same');
Do you realize though that if the window size is not odd, your window does not have the same number of pixels on each side of the "center" pixel. So one pixel will be aligned and you'll have three to one side, and four on the other size. So you have a half pixel shift. For that reason, window sizes are almost always odd, say, 9, so you'd have 4 pixels, then the central one, then 4 more on the other side - perfectly symmetrical. This will get the mean in the window for every pixel, like you said. If you use blockproc(), that moves in "jumps" of the window size and doesn't slide over a pixel at a time.
  2 Kommentare
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 23 Jan. 2013
blockproc() has a Margins option that effectively allows sliding windows.
Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 23 Jan. 2013
I thought it did but didn't see it immediately. But upon further inspection, it looks like you're right, but it seems to be called 'BorderSize' (at least in R2012b) and it looks like if you set a block size of 1 and a "borderSize" of half the window width that you want, you can get the window of whatever size you want to move by just one pixel.

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