Measuring Shape
John C Russ author F Brent Neal author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Inc
Published:5th Jun '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£79.99(9781138072190)
"John Russ is the master of explaining how image processing gets applied to real-world situations. With Brent Neal, he’s done it again in Measuring Shape, this time explaining an expanded toolbox of techniques that includes useful, state-of-the-art methods that can be applied to the broad problem of understanding, characterizing, and measuring shape. He has a gift for finding the kernel of a particular algorithm, explaining it in simple terms, then giving concrete examples that are easily understood. His perspective comes from solving real-world problems and separating out what works in practice from what is just an abstract curiosity."
—Tom Malzbender, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, Palo Alto, California, USA
Useful for those working in fields including industrial quality control, research, and security applications, Measuring Shape is a handbook for the practical application of shape measurement. Covering a wide range of shape measurements likely to be encountered in the literature and in software packages, this book presents an intentionally diverse set of examples that illustrate and enable readers to compare methods used for measurement and quantitative description of 2D and 3D shapes. It stands apart through its focus on examples and applications, which help readers quickly grasp the usefulness of presented techniques without having to approach them through the underlying mathematics.
An elusive concept, shape is a principal governing factor in determining the behavior of objects and structures. Essential to recognizing and classifying objects, it is the central link in manmade and natural processes. Shape dictates everything from the stiffness of a construction beam, to the ability of a leaf to catch water, to the marketing and packaging of consumer products. This book emphasizes techniques that are quantitative and produce a meaningful yet compact set of numerical values that can be used for statistical analysis, comparison, correlation, classification, and identification.
Written by two renowned authors from both industry and academia, this resource explains why users should select a particular method, rather than simply discussing how to use it. Showcasing each process in a clear, accessible, and well-organized way, they explore why a particular one might be appropriate in a given situation, yet a poor choice in another. Providing extensive examples, plus full mathematical descriptions of the various measurements involved, they detail the advantages and limitations of each method and explain...
" ... the reader is immediately engaged by this book more than any other I have read on the subject, most of which either scan the subject more superficially, or require considerable statistical or mathematical facility."
— Sky Alibhai, WildTrack, Monchique, Portugal
"As an introduction, it is lively and clearly written…Generates reader interest. … The purpose is to invite and attract the reader to the subject. This is done very well. … Well illustrated…Upgrades methods in older books, e.g., 3-D measurement discussion…This book is a compelling mandate to replace perception-based morphotype constructs in any systematic analysis of morphology."
— Irwin Rovner, Binary Analytical, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA
"John Russ is the master of explaining how image processing gets applied to real-world situations. With Brent Neal, he’s done it again in Measuring Shape, this time explaining an expanded toolbox of techniques that includes useful, state-of-the-art methods that can be applied to the broad problem of understanding, characterizing, and measuring shape. He has a gift of finding the kernel of a particular algorithm, explaining it in simple terms, then giving concrete examples that are easily understood. His perspective comes from solving real-world problems and separating out what works in practice from what is just an abstract curiosity."
—Tom Malzbender, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, Palo Alto, California, USA
"Extremely readable and engaging, easy to understand… Very complete coverage of methods, with rich examples… Comprehensive references to original publications… most books on digital imaging barely mention a few aspects of the subject [of shape], with few examples. This book provides a very accessible guide to the various approaches that are used, with an engaging style and many examples drawn from a broad spectrum of real objects. While the book includes many mathematical calculations and procedures, it does so without bogging the reader down or hiding the important meaning. It is actually fun to read."
—Louis Ross, University of Missouri (retired), Overland Park, Kansas, USA
ISBN: 9781439855980
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 1020g
460 pages