Abstract
The State University of New York at Buffalo is developing a geographic image retrieval system termed GiView. From a large-scale geographic image database, the system retrieves relevant images that contain parts similar to a given query image. The system extracts texture and color features of geographic images. One key design of the system is a practical image decomposition scheme called nona-tree that uses a hierarchical overlapping window structure. This treatment offers a compromise to alleviate the difficulty of object recognition which is still an open problem in computer vision. The system also takes the advantage of multi-resolution properties of wavelet transforms so that the system can extract texture features in different scales. This design takes into account the multi-scale nature of geographic images and improves retrieval efficiency. A third key design of the system is to cluster database images based on their similarity to a set of geographic image templates. The templates are selected according to needs of particular projects and multiple cluster approaches are implemented to accommodate different needs.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages | 277 |
| Number of pages | 1 |
| State | Published - 1999 |
| Event | Proceedings of the 1999 11th International Conference on Scientific and Statistical Database Management (SSDBM'99) - Cleveland, OH, USA Duration: Jul 28 1999 → Jul 30 1999 |
Conference
| Conference | Proceedings of the 1999 11th International Conference on Scientific and Statistical Database Management (SSDBM'99) |
|---|---|
| City | Cleveland, OH, USA |
| Period | 07/28/99 → 07/30/99 |
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