A Novel Technique for Visualizing Multispectral Images
Wed, Sep 18
|Virtual Event
At the intersection of color phenomenology and imaging systems, a novel technique for visualizing multispectral images is proposed by CRSC's 2024 Student Award Recipient, Trevor Canham.
Time & Location
Sep 18, 2024, 7:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. EDT
Virtual Event
About the event
Abstract
A novel technique for visualizing multispectral images is proposed. Inspired by how prisms work, spectral information is spread over a chromatic noise pattern. This is accomplished by populating the pattern with pixels representing each measurement band at a count proportional to its measured intensity and allows for the spatially continuous discrimination of metameric stimuli.
Speaker Spotlight: Trevor Canham
Trevor Canham, CRSC's Student Award Winner for 2024, studies color imaging under the supervision of Michael Brown at York University in Toronto.
He received the BSc in Motion Picture Science from the Rochester Institute of Technology. In the following years he worked in Marcelo Bertalmío's Image Processing for Enhanced Cinematography lab in Barcelona, Spain, and later at the Spanish National Research Council. He has also worked in the cinema industry - as an intern at Company 3 NY and as a colorist for several independent films.
In 2023 he was awarded best student paper at the 31st Color & Imaging Conference. His interests lie in the interaction between color phenomenology and imaging systems.
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