Provided by: netpbm_11.01.00-2build1_amd64
NAME
pamsistoaglyph - convert a single-image stereogram to a red/cyan anaglyphic image
SYNOPSIS
pamsistoaglyph [--invert] [--sep=number] [--minsep=number] [--gray=number] [in_netpbmfile All options can be abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix. You may use either white space or an equals sign between an option name and its value.
DESCRIPTION
This program is part of Netpbm(1). pamsistoaglyph reads a Netpbm image as input and produces a Netpbm image as output. pamsistoaglyph takes a single-image stereogram (SIS) such as those produced by pamstereogram(1) and converts it to a red/cyan anaglyphic image such as those produced by ppm3d(1). Many people have trouble tricking their eyes into focusing beyond the image in front of them and are therefore unable to perceive the 3-D shape hidden within a single- image stereogram. Anaglyphic stereograms are easier to perceive in 3-D but require a pair of red/cyan glasses such as those often used to watch 3-D movies. The goal of pamsistoaglyph is to help people who have trouble viewing single-image stereograms see the intriguing 3-D effect. pamsistoaglyph can convert single-image random-dot stereograms (SIRDS), wallpaper stereograms, and even dual-image stereograms to anaglyphic images.
OPTIONS
In addition to the options common to all programs based on libnetpbm (most notably -quiet, see Common Options ⟨index.html#commonoptions⟩ ), pamsistoaglyph recognizes the following command line options: For most images, no command-line options need to be specified. The following options are available, however, for unusual circumstances. --invert Swap the left- and right-eye images. pamsistoaglyph assumes that its input represents a wall-eyed stereogram and generates the anaglyphic image accordingly. If the generated image appears to recede into the page where it should pop out of the page (and vice versa), this typically implies that the input image represents a cross-eyed stereogram. Use --invert to correct the image depth. --sep=number Specify the distance in pixels between the left- and right-eye images. Essentially, this corresponds to the distance between repetitions of the background pattern. The --sep option should rarely be necessary as pamsistoaglyph is fairly good at determining automatically the eye-separation distance. --minsep=number This option is similar to --sep but constrains pamsistoaglyph only to a minimum eye-separation distance. Any distance larger than number is acceptable. The --minsep option should rarely be necessary as pamsistoaglyph is fairly good at determining automatically the eye-separation distance. The default value for the minimum eye-separation distance is 10% of the image width; this value seems to work well in practice. --gray=number Limit the number of gray levels to use when searching for the optimal eye-separation distance. Because pamsistoaglyph looks for repeated patterns, it is vulnerable to being confused by slight variations in color. By reducing the input image to grayscale and capping the number of gray levels, pamsistoaglyph ameliorates the effects of unintentional color variations (such as those caused by conversion from a low-quality JPEG image, for example). The default of 63 seems to work well so the --gray option should rarely be necessary.
NOTES
The registration algorithm used by pamsistoaglyph was developed specifically for this program. As far as the author knows, there are no existing algorithms for converting stereograms to anaglyphs. The algorithm works as follows: • Convert the image to grayscale to increase the ability to identify matches. • Count the number of pixels that match N pixels ahead in the image for all N in [1, width/2]. • Maintain a running mean (mu) and standard deviation (sigma) of the number of matched pixels. • Store the N corresponding to each spike in the number of matched pixels. A spike is defined as a tally that exceeds the mean plus one, two, or three standard deviations. Only the first spike of a given standard-deviation multiplier is stored. • If a tally greater than mu+3sigma was encountered, return the corresponding N. If not, then if a tally greater than mu+2sigma was encountered, return the corresponding N. If not, then if a tally greater than mu+sigma was encountered, return the corresponding N. If not, then return the N that produces the minimum average distance between matched pixels (i.e., #matches divided by #pixels). If no such N exceeds the minimum allowable eye-separation value, return zero to indicate failure. • If the algorithm returned zero, rerun the algorithm independently on each row of the input image and return the median of all N that exceed the minimum allowable eye-separation value. If no such N exists, abort with an error message.
HISTORY
Scott Pakin wrote pamsistoaglyph in April 2009. It first appeared in Netpbm in Release 10.47 (June 2009).
AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 2009 Scott Pakin, scott+pbm@pakin.org
SEE ALSO
• pamstereogram(1) • ppm3d(1), • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereogram ⟨http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereogram⟩
DOCUMENT SOURCE
This manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool 'makeman' from HTML source. The master documentation is at http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/pamsistoaglyph.html