| Visibility of wavelet quantization noise  (1997) The discrete wavelet transform (DWT) decompose an image into bands that vary in spatial frequency and orientation.  It is widely used for image compression.  Measures  of  the visibility  of  DWT  quantization  errors  are  required  to  achieve optimal  compression.  Uniform  quantization  of  a  single  band of  coefficients  results  in  an  artifact  that  we  call DWT  uniform quantization noise; it is the sum of a lattice of random amplitude basis  functions  of  the  corresponding  DWT  synthesis  filter.  We measured  visual  detection  thresholds  for  samples  of  DWT  uniform  quantization noise  in  Y,  Cb,  and  Cr  color  channels.  The spatial frequency of a wavelet is r2, where r is display visual resolution in pixels/degree, and is the wavelet level. Thresholds increase rapidly with wavelet spatial frequency. Thresholds also increase from Y to Cr to Cb, and with orientation from lowpass to  horizontal/vertical  to  diagonal.  We  construct  a  mathematical model  for  DWT  noise  detection  thresholds  that  is  a  function of  level,  orientation,  and  display  visual  resolution.  This  allows calculation  of  a  “perceptually  lossless”  quantization  matrix  for which  all  errors  are  in  theory  below  the  visual  threshold.  The model  may  also  be  used  as  the  basis  for  adaptive  quantization schemes. compression, Discrete, image, quantization, transform, wavelet, wavelet IEEE Transactions on Image Processing, 6, 1164-1175 |