Optimized method for segmentation of ancient mural images based on superpixel algorithm

High-precision segmentation of ancient mural images is the foundation of their digital virtual restoration. However, the complexity of the color appearance of ancient murals makes it difficult to achieve high-precision segmentation when using traditional algorithms directly. To address the current c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in neuroscience 2022-11, Vol.16, p.1031524-1031524
Hauptverfasser: Liang, Jinxing, Liu, Anping, Zhou, Jing, Xin, Lei, Zuo, Zhuan, Liu, Zhen, Luo, Hang, Chen, Jia, Hu, Xinrong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:High-precision segmentation of ancient mural images is the foundation of their digital virtual restoration. However, the complexity of the color appearance of ancient murals makes it difficult to achieve high-precision segmentation when using traditional algorithms directly. To address the current challenges in ancient mural image segmentation, an optimized method based on a superpixel algorithm is proposed in this study. First, the simple linear iterative clustering (SLIC) algorithm is applied to the input mural images to obtain superpixels. Then, the density-based spatial clustering of applications with noise (DBSCAN) algorithm is used to cluster the superpixels to obtain the initial clustered images. Subsequently, a series of optimized strategies, including (1) merging the small noise superpixels, (2) segmenting and merging the large noise superpixels, (3) merging initial clusters based on color similarity and positional adjacency to obtain the merged regions, and (4) segmenting and merging the color-mixing noisy superpixels in each of the merged regions, are applied to the initial cluster images sequentially. Finally, the optimized segmentation results are obtained. The proposed method is tested and compared with existing methods based on simulated and real mural images. The results show that the proposed method is effective and outperforms the existing methods.
ISSN:1662-453X
1662-4548
1662-453X
DOI:10.3389/fnins.2022.1031524