Abstract

Image subtraction is used in many areas of machine vision to identify small changes between equivalent pairs of images. Often only a small subset of the differences will be of interest. In motion analysis only those differences caused by motion are important, and differences due to other sources only serve to complicate interpretation. Simple image subtraction detects all differences regardless of their source, and is therefore problematic to use. Superior techniques, analogous to standard statistical tests, can isolate localised differences due to motion from global differences due, for example, to illumination changes. Four such techniques are described. In particular, we introduce a new non-parametric statistical measure which allows a direct probabilistic interpretation of image differences. We expect this to be applicable to a wide range of image formation processes. Its application to medical images is discussed.

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