| Michael Shaw, Robert Blanning, Troy Strader, Andrew Whinston - 2000 - 740 lapas
...properties of homogeneity that do not result from the presence of only a single color or intensity. It is an innate property of virtually all surfaces,...about the structural arrangement of surfaces and their relationship to the surrounding environment (Haralick et al., I973). This is an important visual feature... | |
| Gian Luca Foresti, Carlo S. Regazzoni, Pramod K. Varshney - 2003 - 318 lapas
...of homogeneity that do not result from the presence of only a single color or intensity. Although, it contains important information about the structural arrangement of surfaces and their relationship to the surrounding environmeiit, such level of detail is usually not available in low-resolution... | |
| AJOY KUMAR RAY, TINKU ACHARYA - 2004 - 640 lapas
...property of virtually all surfaces of the grain of wood, the fabric, the pattern of crop in fields, etc. It contains important information about the structural arrangement of surfaces and their relationship to the surrounding environment. Texture is essentially a repetitive pattern of gray level... | |
| Wai Kai Chen - 2004 - 1227 lapas
...property of virtually all surfaces, including such elements as clouds, trees, bricks, hair, and fabric. It contains important information about the structural arrangement of surfaces and their relationship to the surrounding environment. The three principal approaches used in practice to describe... | |
| Qihao Weng, Dale A. Quattrochi - 2006 - 456 lapas
...land-cover classes (eg, the pattern of crops in a field, the crown features of trees in a dense forest). It contains important information about the structural arrangement of surfaces and their relationship to the surrounding environment. Although it is quite easy for human observers to recognize... | |
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