Abstract

Recent research on digital camera performance evaluation introduced the Natural Scene Spatial Frequency Response (NS-SFR) framework, shown to provide a comparable measure to the ISO12233 edge SFR (e-SFR) but derived outside laboratory conditions. The framework extracts step-edges captured from pictorial natural scenes to evaluate the camera SFR. It is in 2-parts. The first utilizes the ISO12233 slanted-edge algorithm to produce an ‘envelope’ of NS-SFRs. The second estimates the system e-SFR from this NS-SFR data. One drawback of this proposed methodology has been the computation time. The process was not optimized, as it first derived NS-SFRs from all suitable step-edges and then further validated and statistically treated the results to estimate the e-SFR. This paper presents changes to the framework processes, aiming to optimize the computation time so that it is practical for real-world implementation. The developments include an improved framework structure, a pixel-stretching filter alternative, and the capability to utilize Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) acceleration. In addition, the methodology was updated to utilize the latest e-SFR algorithm implementation. The resulting code has been incorporated into a self-executable user interface prototype, available in GitHub. Future goals include making it an open-access, cloud-based solution to be used by scientists, camera evaluation labs and the general public.

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