Topological skeleton

A shape and its skeleton, computed with a topology-preserving thinning algorithm.

In shape analysis, skeleton (or topological skeleton) of a shape is a thin version of that shape that is equidistant to its boundaries. The skeleton usually emphasizes geometrical and topological properties of the shape, such as its connectivity, topology, length, direction, and width. Together with the distance of its points to the shape boundary, the skeleton can also serve as a representation of the shape (they contain all the information necessary to reconstruct the shape).

Skeletons have several different mathematical definitions in the technical literature, and there are many different algorithms for computing them. Various different variants of skeleton can also be found, including straight skeletons, morphological skeletons, and skeletons by influence zones (SKIZ) (also known as Voronoi diagram).

In the technical literature, the concepts of skeleton and medial axis are used interchangeably by some authors,[1][2][3][4][5] while some other authors[6][7][8] regard them as related, but not the same. Similarly, the concepts of skeletonization and thinning are also regarded as identical by some,[2] and not by others.[6]

Skeletons have been used in several applications in computer vision, image analysis, and digital image processing, including optical character recognition, fingerprint recognition, visual inspection, pattern recognition, binary image compression, and protein folding.[9]

Mathematical definitions

Skeletons have several different mathematical definitions in the technical literature; most of them lead to similar results in continuous spaces, but usually yield different results in discrete spaces.

Quench points of the fire propagation model

Main article: Grassfire Transform

In his seminal paper, Harry Blum[10] of the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories at Hanscom Air Force Base, in Bedford, Massachusetts, defined a medial axis for computing a skeleton of a shape, using an intuitive model of fire propagation on a grass field, where the field has the form of the given shape. If one "sets fire" at all points on the boundary of that grass field simultaneously, then the skeleton is the set of quench points, i.e., those points where two or more wavefronts meet. This intuitive description is the starting point for a number of more precise definitions.

Centers of maximal disks (or balls)

A disk (or ball) B is said to maximal in a set A if

One way of defining the skeleton of a shape A is as the set of centers of all maximal disks in A.[11]

Centers of bi-tangent circles

The skeleton of a shape A can also be defined as the set of centers of the discs that touch the boundary of A in two or more locations.[12] This definition assures that the skeleton points are equidistant from the shape boundary and is mathematically equivalent to Blum's medial axis transform.

Ridges of the distance function

Many definitions of skeleton make use of the concept of distance function, which is a function that returns for each point x inside a shape A its distance to the closest point on the boundary of A. Using the distance function is very attractive because its computation is relatively fast.

One of the definitions of skeleton using the distance function is as the ridges of the distance function.[6] There is a common mis-statement in the literature that the skeleton consists of points which are "locally maximum" in the distance transform. This is simply not the case, as even cursory comparison of a distance transform and the resulting skeleton will show.

Other definitions

Skeletonization algorithms

There are many different algorithms for computing skeletons for shapes in digital images, as well as continuous sets.

Skeletonization algorithms can sometimes create unwanted branches on the output skeletons. Pruning algorithms are often used to remove these branches.

See also

Notes

  1. Jain, Kasturi & Schunck (1995), Section 2.5.10, p. 55.
  2. 1 2 Gonzales & Woods (2001), Section 11.1.5, p. 650
  3. http://people.csail.mit.edu/polina/papers/skeletons_cvpr00.pdf
  4. Dougherty (1992).
  5. Ogniewicz (1995).
  6. 1 2 3 4 A. K. Jain (1989), Section 9.9, p. 382.
  7. Serra (1982).
  8. 1 2 Sethian (1999), Section 17.5.2, p. 234.
  9. Abeysinghe et al. (2008).
  10. Harry Blum (1967)
  11. A. K. Jain (1989), Section 9.9, p. 387.
  12. 1 2 Gonzales & Woods (2001), Section 9.5.7, p. 543.
  13. Abeysinghe et al. (2008).
  14. R. Kimmel, D. Shaked, N. Kiryati, and A. M. Bruckstein. http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/~ron/PAPERS/skeletonization_CVIU_1995.pdf Comp. Vision and Image Understanding, 62(3):382-391, 1995.
  15. Tannenbaum (1996)
  16. Bai, Longin & Wenyu (2007).
  17. A. K. Jain (1989), Section 9.9, p. 389.

References

Open source software

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.