Abstract
BackgroundGiven energy metabolism, visual information degradation plays an essential role in the retina- lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)-primary visual cortex (V1)-secondary visual cortex (V2) pathway, and is a pivotal issue for visual information processing. Degradation helps the visual nervous system conserve brain energy and efficiently perceive the real world even though a small fraction of visual information reaches the early visual areas. The coding of contour features (edge and corner) is achieved in the retina-LGN-V1-V2 pathway. Based on the above, we proposed a contour detection model based on degradation (CDMD). New methodInspired by pupillary light reflex regulation, we took into consideration the novel approach of the hue-saturation-value (HSV) module for color encoding to meet the subtle chromaticity change rather than using the traditional red-green-blue (RGB) module, following the mechanisms of dark (DA) and light (LA) adaptation processes in photoreceptors. Meanwhile, the degradation mechanism was introduced as a novel strategy focusing only on the essential information to detect contour features, mimicking contour detection by visual perception under the restriction of axons in each optic nerve biologically. Ultimately, we employed the feedback mechanism achieving the optimal HSV value for each pixel of the experimental datasets. ResultsWe used the publicly available Berkeley Segmentation Data Set 500 (BSDS500) to assess the effectiveness of our CDMD model, introduced the F-measure to evaluate the results. The F-measure score was 0.65, achieved by our model. Moreover, CDMD with HSV has a better sensitivity for subtle chromaticity changes than CDMD with RGB. Comparison with existing methodsExperimental results demonstrated that our CDMD model, which functions close to the real visual system, achieved a more competitive performance with low computational cost than some state-of-the-art non-deep-learning and biologically inspired models. Compared with deep-learning-based algorithms, our model contains fewer parameters and computation time, does not require additional visual features, as well as an extra training process. ConclusionsOur proposed CDMD model is a novel approach for contour detection, which mimics the cognitive function of contour detection in early visual areas, and realizes a competitive performance in image processing. It contributes to bridging the gap between the biological visual system and computer vision.
Published Version
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