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JMIV
2008

Fusion Graphs: Merging Properties and Watersheds

14 years 16 days ago
Fusion Graphs: Merging Properties and Watersheds
Region merging methods consist of improving an initial segmentation by merging some pairs of neighboring regions. In this paper, we consider a segmentation as a set of connected regions, separated by a frontier. If the frontier set cannot be reduced without merging some regions then we call it a cleft, or binary watershed. In a general graph framework, merging two regions is not straightforward. We define four classes of graphs for which we prove, thanks to the notion of cleft, that some of the difficulties for defining merging procedures are avoided. Our main result is that one of these classes is the class of graphs in which any cleft is thin. None of the usual adjacency relations on Z2 and Z3 allows a satisfying definition of merging. We introduce the perfect fusion grid on Zn, a regular graph in which merging two neighboring regions can always be performed by removing from the frontier set all the points adjacent to both regions. Key words: Graph theory, region merging, watershed,...
Jean Cousty, Gilles Bertrand, Michel Couprie, Laur
Added 13 Dec 2010
Updated 12 Jan 2011
Type Journal
Year 2008
Where JMIV
Authors Jean Cousty, Gilles Bertrand, Michel Couprie, Laurent Najman
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