def binary_erosion(image, selem=None, out=None): """Return fast binary morphological erosion of an image. This function returns the same result as greyscale erosion but performs faster for binary images. Morphological erosion sets a pixel at ``(i,j)`` to the minimum over all pixels in the neighborhood centered at ``(i,j)``. Erosion shrinks bright regions and enlarges dark regions. Parameters ---------- image : ndarray Binary input image. selem : ndarray, optional The neighborhood expressed as a 2-D array of 1's and 0's. If None, use a cross-shaped structuring element (connectivity=1). out : ndarray of bool, optional The array to store the result of the morphology. If None is passed, a new array will be allocated. Returns ------- eroded : ndarray of bool or uint The result of the morphological erosion taking values in ``[False, True]``. """ if out is None: out = cp.empty(image.shape, dtype=cp.bool_) ndi.binary_erosion(image, structure=selem, output=out, border_value=True) return out
def test_01_01_circle(self): """Test that the Canny filter finds the outlines of a circle""" i, j = cp.mgrid[-200:200, -200:200].astype(float) / 200 c = cp.abs(cp.sqrt(i * i + j * j) - 0.5) < 0.02 result = feature.canny(c.astype(float), 4, 0, 0, cp.ones(c.shape, bool)) # # erode and dilate the circle to get rings that should contain the # outlines # # TODO: grlee77: only implemented brute_force=True, so added that to # these tests cd = binary_dilation(c, iterations=3, brute_force=True) ce = binary_erosion(c, iterations=3, brute_force=True) cde = cp.logical_and(cd, cp.logical_not(ce)) self.assertTrue(cp.all(cde[result])) # # The circle has a radius of 100. There are two rings here, one # for the inside edge and one for the outside. So that's # 100 * 2 * 2 * 3 for those places where pi is still 3. # The edge contains both pixels if there's a tie, so we # bump the count a little. point_count = cp.sum(result) self.assertTrue(point_count > 1200) self.assertTrue(point_count < 1600)
def _mask_filter_result(result, mask): """Return result after masking. Input masks are eroded so that mask areas in the original image don't affect values in the result. """ if mask is not None: erosion_selem = ndi.generate_binary_structure(mask.ndim, mask.ndim) mask = ndi.binary_erosion(mask, erosion_selem, border_value=0) result *= mask return result
def sup_inf(u): """SI operator.""" if cnp.ndim(u) == 2: P = _P2 elif cnp.ndim(u) == 3: P = _P3 else: raise ValueError("u has an invalid number of dimensions " "(should be 2 or 3)") erosions = [] for P_i in P: e = ndi.binary_erosion(u, cp.asarray(P_i)).astype(np.int8, copy=False) erosions.append(e) return cp.stack(erosions, axis=0).max(0)
def test_01_02_circle_with_noise(self): """Test that the Canny filter finds the circle outlines in a noisy image""" cp.random.seed(0) i, j = cp.mgrid[-200:200, -200:200].astype(float) / 200 c = cp.abs(cp.sqrt(i * i + j * j) - 0.5) < 0.02 cf = c.astype(float) * 0.5 + cp.random.uniform(size=c.shape) * 0.5 result = F.canny(cf, 4, 0.1, 0.2, cp.ones(c.shape, bool)) # # erode and dilate the circle to get rings that should contain the # outlines # cd = binary_dilation(c, iterations=4, brute_force=True) ce = binary_erosion(c, iterations=4, brute_force=True) cde = cp.logical_and(cd, cp.logical_not(ce)) self.assertTrue(cp.all(cde[result])) point_count = cp.sum(result) self.assertTrue(point_count > 1200) self.assertTrue(point_count < 1600)
def perimeter(image, neighbourhood=4): """Calculate total perimeter of all objects in binary image. Parameters ---------- image : (N, M) ndarray 2D binary image. neighbourhood : 4 or 8, optional Neighborhood connectivity for border pixel determination. It is used to compute the contour. A higher neighbourhood widens the border on which the perimeter is computed. Returns ------- perimeter : float Total perimeter of all objects in binary image. References ---------- .. [1] K. Benkrid, D. Crookes. Design and FPGA Implementation of a Perimeter Estimator. The Queen's University of Belfast. http://www.cs.qub.ac.uk/~d.crookes/webpubs/papers/perimeter.doc Examples -------- >>> from skimage import data, util >>> from skimage.measure import label >>> # coins image (binary) >>> img_coins = data.coins() > 110 >>> # total perimeter of all objects in the image >>> perimeter(img_coins, neighbourhood=4) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS 7796.867... >>> perimeter(img_coins, neighbourhood=8) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS 8806.268... """ if image.ndim != 2: raise NotImplementedError("`perimeter` supports 2D images only") if neighbourhood == 4: strel = STREL_4 else: strel = STREL_8 strel = cp.asarray(strel) image = image.astype(cp.uint8) eroded_image = ndi.binary_erosion(image, strel, border_value=0) border_image = image - eroded_image perimeter_weights = cp.zeros(50, dtype=cp.double) perimeter_weights[[5, 7, 15, 17, 25, 27]] = 1 perimeter_weights[[21, 33]] = sqrt(2) perimeter_weights[[13, 23]] = (1 + sqrt(2)) / 2 perimeter_image = ndi.convolve( border_image, cp.asarray([[10, 2, 10], [2, 1, 2], [10, 2, 10]]), mode="constant", cval=0, ) # You can also write # return perimeter_weights[perimeter_image].sum() # but that was measured as taking much longer than bincount + cp.dot (5x # as much time) perimeter_histogram = cp.bincount(perimeter_image.ravel(), minlength=50) total_perimeter = perimeter_histogram @ perimeter_weights return total_perimeter
def morphological_geodesic_active_contour( gimage, iterations, init_level_set="circle", smoothing=1, threshold="auto", balloon=0, iter_callback=lambda x: None, ): """Morphological Geodesic Active Contours (MorphGAC). Geodesic active contours implemented with morphological operators. It can be used to segment objects with visible but noisy, cluttered, broken borders. Parameters ---------- gimage : (M, N) or (L, M, N) array Preprocessed image or volume to be segmented. This is very rarely the original image. Instead, this is usually a preprocessed version of the original image that enhances and highlights the borders (or other structures) of the object to segment. `morphological_geodesic_active_contour` will try to stop the contour evolution in areas where `gimage` is small. See `morphsnakes.inverse_gaussian_gradient` as an example function to perform this preprocessing. Note that the quality of `morphological_geodesic_active_contour` might greatly depend on this preprocessing. iterations : uint Number of iterations to run. init_level_set : str, (M, N) array, or (L, M, N) array Initial level set. If an array is given, it will be binarized and used as the initial level set. If a string is given, it defines the method to generate a reasonable initial level set with the shape of the `image`. Accepted values are 'checkerboard' and 'circle'. See the documentation of `checkerboard_level_set` and `circle_level_set` respectively for details about how these level sets are created. smoothing : uint, optional Number of times the smoothing operator is applied per iteration. Reasonable values are around 1-4. Larger values lead to smoother segmentations. threshold : float, optional Areas of the image with a value smaller than this threshold will be considered borders. The evolution of the contour will stop in this areas. balloon : float, optional Balloon force to guide the contour in non-informative areas of the image, i.e., areas where the gradient of the image is too small to push the contour towards a border. A negative value will shrink the contour, while a positive value will expand the contour in these areas. Setting this to zero will disable the balloon force. iter_callback : function, optional If given, this function is called once per iteration with the current level set as the only argument. This is useful for debugging or for plotting intermediate results during the evolution. Returns ------- out : (M, N) or (L, M, N) array Final segmentation (i.e., the final level set) See Also -------- inverse_gaussian_gradient, circle_level_set, checkerboard_level_set Notes ----- This is a version of the Geodesic Active Contours (GAC) algorithm that uses morphological operators instead of solving partial differential equations (PDEs) for the evolution of the contour. The set of morphological operators used in this algorithm are proved to be infinitesimally equivalent to the GAC PDEs (see [1]_). However, morphological operators are do not suffer from the numerical stability issues typically found in PDEs (e.g., it is not necessary to find the right time step for the evolution), and are computationally faster. The algorithm and its theoretical derivation are described in [1]_. References ---------- .. [1] A Morphological Approach to Curvature-based Evolution of Curves and Surfaces, Pablo Márquez-Neila, Luis Baumela, Luis Álvarez. In IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence (PAMI), 2014, :DOI:`10.1109/TPAMI.2013.106` """ image = gimage init_level_set = _init_level_set(init_level_set, image.shape) _check_input(image, init_level_set) if threshold == "auto": threshold = cp.percentile(image, 40) structure = cp.ones((3, ) * len(image.shape), dtype=cp.int8) dimage = cnp.gradient(image) # threshold_mask = image > threshold if balloon != 0: threshold_mask_balloon = image > threshold / cp.abs(balloon) u = (init_level_set > 0).astype(cp.int8) iter_callback(u) for _ in range(iterations): # Balloon if balloon > 0: aux = ndi.binary_dilation(u, structure) elif balloon < 0: aux = ndi.binary_erosion(u, structure) if balloon != 0: u[threshold_mask_balloon] = aux[threshold_mask_balloon] # Image attachment aux = cp.zeros_like(image) du = cnp.gradient(u) for el1, el2 in zip(dimage, du): aux += el1 * el2 u[aux > 0] = 1 u[aux < 0] = 0 # Smoothing for _ in range(smoothing): u = _curvop(u) iter_callback(u) return u
def canny( image, sigma=1.0, low_threshold=None, high_threshold=None, mask=None, use_quantiles=False, ): """Edge filter an image using the Canny algorithm. Parameters ----------- image : 2D array Grayscale input image to detect edges on; can be of any dtype. sigma : float, optional Standard deviation of the Gaussian filter. low_threshold : float, optional Lower bound for hysteresis thresholding (linking edges). If None, low_threshold is set to 10% of dtype's max. high_threshold : float, optional Upper bound for hysteresis thresholding (linking edges). If None, high_threshold is set to 20% of dtype's max. mask : array, dtype=bool, optional Mask to limit the application of Canny to a certain area. use_quantiles : bool, optional If True then treat low_threshold and high_threshold as quantiles of the edge magnitude image, rather than absolute edge magnitude values. If True then the thresholds must be in the range [0, 1]. Returns ------- output : 2D array (image) The binary edge map. See also -------- skimage.sobel Notes ----- The steps of the algorithm are as follows: * Smooth the image using a Gaussian with ``sigma`` width. * Apply the horizontal and vertical Sobel operators to get the gradients within the image. The edge strength is the norm of the gradient. * Thin potential edges to 1-pixel wide curves. First, find the normal to the edge at each point. This is done by looking at the signs and the relative magnitude of the X-Sobel and Y-Sobel to sort the points into 4 categories: horizontal, vertical, diagonal and antidiagonal. Then look in the normal and reverse directions to see if the values in either of those directions are greater than the point in question. Use interpolation to get a mix of points instead of picking the one that's the closest to the normal. * Perform a hysteresis thresholding: first label all points above the high threshold as edges. Then recursively label any point above the low threshold that is 8-connected to a labeled point as an edge. References ----------- .. [1] Canny, J., A Computational Approach To Edge Detection, IEEE Trans. Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, 8:679-714, 1986 :DOI:`10.1109/TPAMI.1986.4767851` .. [2] William Green's Canny tutorial https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canny_edge_detector Examples -------- >>> import cupy as cp >>> from cupyimg.skimage import feature >>> # Generate noisy image of a square >>> im = cp.zeros((256, 256)) >>> im[64:-64, 64:-64] = 1 >>> im += 0.2 * cp.random.rand(*im.shape) >>> # First trial with the Canny filter, with the default smoothing >>> edges1 = feature.canny(im) >>> # Increase the smoothing for better results >>> edges2 = feature.canny(im, sigma=3) """ # # The steps involved: # # * Smooth using the Gaussian with sigma above. # # * Apply the horizontal and vertical Sobel operators to get the gradients # within the image. The edge strength is the sum of the magnitudes # of the gradients in each direction. # # * Find the normal to the edge at each point using the arctangent of the # ratio of the Y sobel over the X sobel - pragmatically, we can # look at the signs of X and Y and the relative magnitude of X vs Y # to sort the points into 4 categories: horizontal, vertical, # diagonal and antidiagonal. # # * Look in the normal and reverse directions to see if the values # in either of those directions are greater than the point in question. # Use interpolation to get a mix of points instead of picking the one # that's the closest to the normal. # # * Label all points above the high threshold as edges. # * Recursively label any point above the low threshold that is 8-connected # to a labeled point as an edge. # # Regarding masks, any point touching a masked point will have a gradient # that is "infected" by the masked point, so it's enough to erode the # mask by one and then mask the output. We also mask out the border points # because who knows what lies beyond the edge of the image? # check_nD(image, 2) dtype_max = dtype_limits(image, clip_negative=False)[1] if low_threshold is None: low_threshold = 0.1 elif use_quantiles: if not (0.0 <= low_threshold <= 1.0): raise ValueError("Quantile thresholds must be between 0 and 1.") else: low_threshold = low_threshold / dtype_max if high_threshold is None: high_threshold = 0.2 elif use_quantiles: if not (0.0 <= high_threshold <= 1.0): raise ValueError("Quantile thresholds must be between 0 and 1.") else: high_threshold = high_threshold / dtype_max if mask is None: mask = cp.ones(image.shape, dtype=bool) def fsmooth(x): return img_as_float(gaussian(x, sigma, mode="constant")) smoothed = smooth_with_function_and_mask(image, fsmooth, mask) jsobel = ndi.sobel(smoothed, axis=1) isobel = ndi.sobel(smoothed, axis=0) abs_isobel = cp.abs(isobel) abs_jsobel = cp.abs(jsobel) magnitude = cp.hypot(isobel, jsobel) # # Make the eroded mask. Setting the border value to zero will wipe # out the image edges for us. # s = generate_binary_structure(2, 2) eroded_mask = binary_erosion(mask, s, border_value=0) eroded_mask = eroded_mask & (magnitude > 0) # # --------- Find local maxima -------------- # # Assign each point to have a normal of 0-45 degrees, 45-90 degrees, # 90-135 degrees and 135-180 degrees. # local_maxima = cp.zeros(image.shape, bool) # ----- 0 to 45 degrees ------ pts_plus = (isobel >= 0) & (jsobel >= 0) & (abs_isobel >= abs_jsobel) pts_minus = (isobel <= 0) & (jsobel <= 0) & (abs_isobel >= abs_jsobel) pts = pts_plus | pts_minus pts = eroded_mask & pts # Get the magnitudes shifted left to make a matrix of the points to the # right of pts. Similarly, shift left and down to get the points to the # top right of pts. c1 = magnitude[1:, :][pts[:-1, :]] c2 = magnitude[1:, 1:][pts[:-1, :-1]] m = magnitude[pts] w = abs_jsobel[pts] / abs_isobel[pts] c_plus = c2 * w + c1 * (1 - w) <= m c1 = magnitude[:-1, :][pts[1:, :]] c2 = magnitude[:-1, :-1][pts[1:, 1:]] c_minus = c2 * w + c1 * (1 - w) <= m local_maxima[pts] = c_plus & c_minus # ----- 45 to 90 degrees ------ # Mix diagonal and vertical # pts_plus = (isobel >= 0) & (jsobel >= 0) & (abs_isobel <= abs_jsobel) pts_minus = (isobel <= 0) & (jsobel <= 0) & (abs_isobel <= abs_jsobel) pts = pts_plus | pts_minus pts = eroded_mask & pts c1 = magnitude[:, 1:][pts[:, :-1]] c2 = magnitude[1:, 1:][pts[:-1, :-1]] m = magnitude[pts] w = abs_isobel[pts] / abs_jsobel[pts] c_plus = c2 * w + c1 * (1 - w) <= m c1 = magnitude[:, :-1][pts[:, 1:]] c2 = magnitude[:-1, :-1][pts[1:, 1:]] c_minus = c2 * w + c1 * (1 - w) <= m local_maxima[pts] = c_plus & c_minus # ----- 90 to 135 degrees ------ # Mix anti-diagonal and vertical # pts_plus = (isobel <= 0) & (jsobel >= 0) & (abs_isobel <= abs_jsobel) pts_minus = (isobel >= 0) & (jsobel <= 0) & (abs_isobel <= abs_jsobel) pts = pts_plus | pts_minus pts = eroded_mask & pts c1a = magnitude[:, 1:][pts[:, :-1]] c2a = magnitude[:-1, 1:][pts[1:, :-1]] m = magnitude[pts] w = abs_isobel[pts] / abs_jsobel[pts] c_plus = c2a * w + c1a * (1.0 - w) <= m c1 = magnitude[:, :-1][pts[:, 1:]] c2 = magnitude[1:, :-1][pts[:-1, 1:]] c_minus = c2 * w + c1 * (1.0 - w) <= m local_maxima[pts] = c_plus & c_minus # ----- 135 to 180 degrees ------ # Mix anti-diagonal and anti-horizontal # pts_plus = (isobel <= 0) & (jsobel >= 0) & (abs_isobel >= abs_jsobel) pts_minus = (isobel >= 0) & (jsobel <= 0) & (abs_isobel >= abs_jsobel) pts = pts_plus | pts_minus pts = eroded_mask & pts c1 = magnitude[:-1, :][pts[1:, :]] c2 = magnitude[:-1, 1:][pts[1:, :-1]] m = magnitude[pts] w = abs_jsobel[pts] / abs_isobel[pts] c_plus = c2 * w + c1 * (1 - w) <= m c1 = magnitude[1:, :][pts[:-1, :]] c2 = magnitude[1:, :-1][pts[:-1, 1:]] c_minus = c2 * w + c1 * (1 - w) <= m local_maxima[pts] = c_plus & c_minus # # ---- If use_quantiles is set then calculate the thresholds to use # if use_quantiles: high_threshold = cp.percentile(magnitude, 100.0 * high_threshold) low_threshold = cp.percentile(magnitude, 100.0 * low_threshold) # # ---- Create two masks at the two thresholds. # high_mask = local_maxima & (magnitude >= high_threshold) low_mask = local_maxima & (magnitude >= low_threshold) # # Segment the low-mask, then only keep low-segments that have # some high_mask component in them # labels, count = ndi.label(low_mask, structure=cp.ones((3, 3), bool)) if count == 0: return low_mask sums = cp.asarray( ndi.sum(high_mask, labels, cp.arange(count, dtype=cp.int32) + 1), ) sums = cp.atleast_1d(sums) good_label = cp.zeros((count + 1,), bool) good_label[1:] = sums > 0 output_mask = good_label[labels] return output_mask