Abstract

A method for efficient detection of the dominant local reflectional symmetry in grey level images is described. The general approach is to define a local measure of reflectional symmetry that transforms the symmetry detection problem to an optimization problem, and obtain the symmetric regions by an efficient global optimization algorithm. The symmetry of a 1D function can be measured in the frequency domain as the fraction of its energy that resides in symmetric Fourier basis functions. This approach is extended to two dimensions. Locality can be formally treated in terms of the Gabor decomposition and implemented via soft windowing. The resulting measure is a complicated multimodal function of the location of the center of the supporting region, its size, and the orientation of the symmetry axis. A new probabilistic generic algorithm is applied to the determination of the global maximum of the reflectional symmetry function. Less than one thousand evaluations of the local symmetry measure are typically needed in order to locate the dominant symmetry in natural, wildlife test images.

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