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Paper
20 March 2015 Human wound photogrammetry with low-cost hardware based on automatic calibration of geometry and color
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Photographic documentation and image-based wound assessment is frequently performed in medical diagnostics, patient care, and clinical research. To support quantitative assessment, photographic imaging is based on expensive and high-quality hardware and still needs appropriate registration and calibration. Using inexpensive consumer hardware such as smartphone-integrated cameras, calibration of geometry, color, and contrast is challenging. Some methods involve color calibration using a reference pattern such as a standard color card, which is located manually in the photographs. In this paper, we adopt the lattice detection algorithm by Park et al. from real world to medicine. At first, the algorithm extracts and clusters feature points according to their local intensity patterns. Groups of similar points are fed into a selection process, which tests for suitability as a lattice grid. The group which describes the largest probability of the meshes of a lattice is selected and from it a template for an initial lattice cell is extracted. Then, a Markov random field is modeled. Using the mean-shift belief propagation, the detection of the 2D lattice is solved iteratively as a spatial tracking problem. Least-squares geometric calibration of projective distortions and non-linear color calibration in RGB space is supported by 35 corner points of 24 color patches, respectively. The method is tested on 37 photographs taken from the German Calciphylaxis registry, where non-standardized photographic documentation is collected nationwide from all contributing trial sites. In all images, the reference card location is correctly identified. At least, 28 out of 35 lattice points were detected, outperforming the SIFT-based approach previously applied. Based on these coordinates, robust geometry and color registration is performed making the photographs comparable for quantitative analysis.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Abin Jose, Daniel Haak, Stephan Jonas, Vincent Brandenburg, and Thomas M. Deserno "Human wound photogrammetry with low-cost hardware based on automatic calibration of geometry and color", Proc. SPIE 9414, Medical Imaging 2015: Computer-Aided Diagnosis, 94143J (20 March 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2081809
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CITATIONS
Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Calibration

Photography

Cameras

Detection and tracking algorithms

Image registration

Photogrammetry

RGB color model

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