Popis: |
Non-uniform illumination image is often generated owing to various factors, such as an improper setting in the image acquisition device and absorption or reflectance of the objects that results in the existence of different exposure regions in the image. Although Histogram Equalization (HE) is well known and widely used in image enhancement, existing HE-based methods often generate washed-out effects and show unnatural appearance due to the over-enhancement phenomenon, which limits the capabilities of achieving illumination uniformity of an image. Therefore, this study proposes a modified HE method for non-uniform illumination image, namely Nonlinear Exposure Intensity-Based Modification Histogram Equalization (NEIMHE). The proposed NEIMHE method divides the non-uniform illumination image into five sub-regions and modifies the histogram of each sub-region by setting a nonlinear weight into their cumulative density function (CDF) of histogram in each sub-region. Each modified histogram is then equalized using modified HE equations that provide the intensity expansion and different intensity mapping directions for under-exposed and over-exposed sub-regions. A total of 354 non-uniform illuminated sample images were used to evaluate the performance of the proposed NEIMHE method, qualitatively and quantitatively. The proposed NEIMHE method was compared qualitatively with five state-of-the-art methods: Backlit, Adaptive Fuzzy Exposure Local Contrast Enhancement (AFELCE), Visual Contrast Enhancement Algorithm Based on Histogram Equalization (VCEA), Exposure Region-based Multi Histogram Equalization (ERMHE); and Exposure based Sub-Image Histogram Equalization (ESIHE). The proposed NEIMHE method produced an enhanced image with more uniform illumination, better preservation of image details, and high capability of maintaining image naturalness. Quantitatively, the proposed NEIMHE method achieved the highest scores in Discrete Entropy (DE), Measure of Enhancement (EME), Measure of Enhancement by Entropy (EMEE), and Peak Signal to Noise Ratio (PSNR); it attained second-best in Absolute Mean Brightness Error (AMBE) and Lightness Order Error (LOE). From both analyses, the proposed NEIMHE method has shown its capability of enhancing different exposure regions that exist in non-uniform illumination images. |