Abstract

Color is the major source of information widely used in image analysis and content-based retrieval. Extracting dominant colors that are prominent in a visual scenery is of utter importance since human visual system primarily uses them for perception. In this paper we address dominant color extraction as a dynamic clustering problem and use techniques based on Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) for finding optimal (number of) dominant colors in a given color space, distance metric and a proper validity index function. The first technique, so-called Multi-Dimensional (MD) PSO, re-forms the native structure of swarm particles in such a way that they can make inter-dimensional passes with a dedicated dimensional PSO process. Therefore, in a multidimensional search space where the optimum dimension is unknown, swarm particles can seek both positional and dimensional optima. Nevertheless, MD PSO is still susceptible to premature convergences due to lack of divergence. To address this problem we then present Fractional Global Best Formation (FGBF) technique, which basically collects all promising dimensional components and fractionally creates an artificial global-best particle (aGB) that has the potential to be a better ldquoguiderdquo than the PSOpsilas native gbest particle. We finally propose an efficient color distance metric, which uses a fuzzy model for computing color (dis-) similarities over HSV (or HSL) color space. The comparative evaluations against MPEG-7 dominant color descriptor show the superiority of the proposed technique.

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