Abstract

The first quarter of 2007 started as an active season for the real-time image processing community. The annual SPIE Conference on Real-Time Image Processing, which was held in San Jose, CA, highlighted recent developments in this growing branch of image processing. As one of the few regular events with its focus matching that of JRTIP, one witnessed the growth in applications of real-time image and video processing. The conference served as an effective instrument to foster the dissemination of recent results and to leverage the cohesion of the real time image processing community. The preparations for the next SPIE Conference on Real-Time Image Processing in 2008 are already progressing and its call-for-papers is included at the end of this issue. In 2007, JRTIP is going to seek involvement of more scientists in the field of real-time image and video processing. After 1 year of operation, the editors-in-chief have started to recruit additional associate editors to enlarge the expertise base of the editorial board, to solicit manuscript submissions from potential authors, and to make the reviewing process more efficient. Interested colleagues should contact the editors-in-chief expressing their Associate Editor candidature in support of one or more fields within the focus of JRTIP. In addition, they wish to encourage researchers to act as guest editors for special issues on any real-time image or video processing related topics of interest to them. It is possible to schedule two special issues in 2007, provided that a draft call-for-papers is sent to the editors-in-chief as soon as possible. The third issue of JRTIP presents four articles, two are survey papers and two are original research papers. These articles address different real-time image processing perspectives ranging from algorithmic to hardware issues. The first survey paper deals with the real-time filtering in 2D and 3D using ordered statistics that are supported by a rich set of experimental results derived from several algorithmic variations. Performance measurements are used to demonstrate the effect of noise suppression and preservation of fine image structures and to show the DSP implementation of denoising filters. The second survey paper introduces a non-invasive analysis of dynamic processes in living cells using microscopic computer vision techniques for understanding the interactions between cellular and molecular functional units and for providing novel insights into the cell biology. The third article is an original research paper covering a machine vision application involving vision-based position sensing for aerial refueling of unmanned aerial vehicles in real-time. A full image processing chain is investigated and tested in a MATLAB/Simulink soft real-time environment as well as in a Linux/RTAI hard real-time environment. The feasibility of the real-time implementation is shown using off-the-shelf commercial hardware. The fourth article is another original research paper describing a hardware architecture for real-time fractal coding for image compression. The introduced parallel hardware architecture contains units for domain M. F. Carlsohn (&) Ingenieurberatung fur Computer Vision und Bildkommunikation, Am Heiddamm 36g, 28355 Bremen, Germany e-mail: matthias.carlsohn@t-online.de

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