Abstract
In the modern age, watermarking techniques are mandatory to secure digital communication over the internet. For an optimal technique, a high signal-to-noise ratio and normalized correctional is required. In this paper, a digital watermarking technique is proposed on the basis of the least significant bit through an image gradient and chaotic map. The image is segmented into noncorrelated blocks, and the gradient of each block is calculated. The gradient of the image expresses the rapid changes in an image. A chaotic substitution box (S-Box) is used to scramble the watermark according to a piecewise linear chaotic map (PWLCM). PWLCM has a positive Lyapunov exponent and better balance property as compared to other chaotic maps. This S-Box technique is capable of producing a disperse sequence with high nonlinearity in the generated sequence. Least significant bit is a simple technique for embedding but it has a high payload capacity and direct pixel manipulation. The embedding payload introduces a tradeoff between robustness and imperceptibility; hence, the image gradient is a technique to identify the best-suited place to embed a watermark and avoid image degradation. By modifying the least significant bits of the original image, the watermark signal is embedded according to the image gradient. In the image gradient, the direction and magnitude decide how much embeding can be done. In comparison with other methods, the experimental results show satisfactory progress in robustness against several image processing and geometrical attacks while maintaining the imperceptibility of the watermark signal.
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