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NAME

       pnmnlfilt  -  non-linear  filters:  smooth, alpha trim mean, optimal estimation smoothing,
       edge enhancement.

SYNOPSIS

       pnmnlfilt alpha radius [pnmfile]

DESCRIPTION

       pnmnlfilt produces an output image where the pixels are a summary of multiple pixels  near
       the corresponding location in an input image.

       This program works on multi-image streams.

       This  is something of a swiss army knife filter. It has 3 distinct operating modes. In all
       of the modes each pixel in the image is examined and processed according  to  it  and  its
       surrounding pixels values. Rather than using the 9 pixels in a 3x3 block, 7 hexagonal area
       samples are taken, the size of the hexagons being controlled by the  radius  parameter.  A
       radius  value  of  0.3333 means that the 7 hexagons exactly fit into the center pixel (ie.
       there will be no filtering effect). A radius value  of  1.0  means  that  the  7  hexagons
       exactly fit a 3x3 pixel array.

Alpha trimmed mean filter. (0.0 <= alpha <= 0.5)

       The  value  of  the center pixel will be replaced by the mean of the 7 hexagon values, but
       the 7 values are sorted by size and the top and bottom alpha portion of the 7 are excluded
       from the mean.  This implies that an alpha value of 0.0 gives the same sort of output as a
       normal convolution (ie. averaging or smoothing filter), where radius  will  determine  the
       "strength"  of the filter. A good value to start from for subtle filtering is alpha = 0.0,
       radius = 0.55 For a more blatant effect, try alpha 0.0 and radius 1.0

       An alpha value of 0.5 will cause the median value of the 7 hexagons to be used to  replace
       the  center pixel value. This sort of filter is good for eliminating "pop" or single pixel
       noise from an image without spreading the noise out or smudging  features  on  the  image.
       Judicious use of the radius parameter will fine tune the filtering. Intermediate values of
       alpha give effects somewhere between smoothing  and  "pop"  noise  reduction.  For  subtle
       filtering try starting with values of alpha = 0.4, radius = 0.6  For a more blatant effect
       try alpha = 0.5, radius = 1.0

Optimal estimation smoothing. (1.0 <= alpha <= 2.0)

       This type of filter applies a smoothing filter adaptively over the image.  For each  pixel
       the  variance of the surrounding hexagon values is calculated, and the amount of smoothing
       is made inversely proportional to it. The idea is that if the variance is small then it is
       due to noise in the image, while if the variance is large, it is because of "wanted" image
       features. As usual the radius parameter controls the effective  radius,  but  it  probably
       advisable  to  leave  the  radius  between  0.8 and 1.0 for the variance calculation to be
       meaningful.  The alpha parameter sets the noise threshold, over which less smoothing  will
       be  done.   This  means  that  small  values  of alpha will give the most subtle filtering
       effect, while large values will tend to smooth all parts of the  image.  You  could  start
       with  values  like  alpha  =  1.2, radius = 1.0 and try increasing or decreasing the alpha
       parameter to get the desired effect. This  type  of  filter  is  best  for  filtering  out
       dithering noise in both bitmap and color images.

Edge enhancement. (-0.1 >= alpha >= -0.9)

       This  is the opposite type of filter to the smoothing filter. It enhances edges. The alpha
       parameter controls the amount of edge enhancement, from subtle (-0.1) to  blatant  (-0.9).
       The radius parameter controls the effective radius as usual, but useful values are between
       0.5 and 0.9. Try starting with values of alpha = 0.3, radius = 0.8

Combination use.

       The various modes of pnmnlfilt can be used one after the other to get the desired  result.
       For  instance to turn a monochrome dithered image into a grayscale image you could try one
       or two passes of the smoothing filter, followed  by  a  pass  of  the  optimal  estimation
       filter, then some subtle edge enhancement. Note that using edge enhancement is only likely
       to be useful after one of the non-linear filters (alpha trimmed mean or optimal estimation
       filter), as edge enhancement is the direct opposite of smoothing.

       For  reducing  color quantization noise in images (ie. turning .gif files back into 24 bit
       files) you could try a pass of the optimal estimation filter (alpha 1.2,  radius  1.0),  a
       pass  of  the  median  filter  (alpha  0.5,  radius 0.55), and possibly a pass of the edge
       enhancement filter.  Several passes of the optimal estimation filter with declining  alpha
       values are more effective than a single pass with a large alpha value.  As usual, there is
       a  tradeoff  between  filtering  effectiveness  and  loosing  detail.  Experimentation  is
       encouraged.

References:

       The alpha-trimmed mean filter is based on the description in IEEE CG&A May 1990 Page 23 by
       Mark E. Lee and Richard A. Redner,  and  has  been  enhanced  to  allow  continuous  alpha
       adjustment.

       The optimal estimation filter is taken from an article "Converting Dithered Images Back to
       Gray Scale" by  Allen  Stenger,  Dr  Dobb's  Journal,  November  1992,  and  this  article
       references  "Digital  Image  Enhancement  and Noise Filtering by Use of Local Statistics",
       Jong-Sen Lee, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, March 1980.

       The edge enhancement details are  from  pgmenhance(1),  which  is  taken  from  Philip  R.
       Thompson's  "xim"  program,  which in turn took it from section 6 of "Digital Halftones by
       Dot Diffusion", D. E. Knuth, ACM Transaction on Graphics Vol.  6,  No.  4,  October  1987,
       which in turn got it from two 1976 papers by J. F. Jarvis et. al.

SEE ALSO

       pgmenhance(1), pnmconvol(1), pnm(5)

BUGS

       Integers and tables may overflow if PPM_MAXMAXVAL is greater than 255.

AUTHOR

       Graeme W. Gill    graeme@labtam.oz.au

                                         5 February 1993                             pnmnlfilt(1)