Fourier Vision provides a new treatment of figure-ground segmentation
in scenes comprising transparent, translucent, or opaque objects.
Exploiting the relative motion between figure and ground, this technique
deals explicitly with the separation of additive signals and makes no
assumptions about the spatial or spectral content of the images, with
segmentation being carried out phasor by phasor in the Fourier domain.
It works with several camera configurations, such as camera motion and
short-baseline binocular stereo, and performs best on images with small
velocities/displacements, typically one to ten pixels per frame. The
book also addresses the use of Fourier techniques to estimate stereo
disparity and optical flow. Numerous examples are provided throughout.
Fourier Vision will be of value to researchers in image processing &
computer vision and, especially, to those who have to deal with
superimposed transparent or translucent objects. Researchers in
application areas such as medical imaging and acoustic signal processing
will also find this of interest.