Split repetitive image to find pattern

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Mat
Mat el 17 de Mayo de 2023
Comentada: Mat el 22 de Mayo de 2023
Hello
I have an image, which has been made by repeating the same (unknown) pattern. Usually there are 4 to 12 repetitions. This image is processed, as rotated, and cropped (taken a portion of it). A few examples of images (to be renamed as A for the code to run) are added here. My aim is to find this pattern, that is to split the image into complete equal tiles.
My code uses autocorrelation to find the repetition distance, but it seems it is not always working. It should find the right pattern, and also tell me if there are no complete tiles.
Rotation angle is fine. Code sometimes works, sometimes not. I can add more examples if needed.
If you have a better way to find the solution, please let me know
I hope it is clear what I ask
Thank you very much
%% autocorrelation
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
[rows, cols] = size(A);
B = abs(fftshift(ifft2(fft2(A).*conj(fft2(A)))))./(rows*cols);
%B = medfilt2(B);
%% threshold the matrix and find centroids
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
C = B;
checkstart = max(C(:));
checkstart = round(checkstart,2);
for check = checkstart:-0.01:0
for i = 1:rows
for j = 1:cols
if B(i,j)<=check
C(i,j) = 0;
else
C(i,j) = 1;
end
end
end
L = bwlabel(C);
s = regionprops(L,'centroid');
if numel(s)>=3 && numel(s)<=10
break
end
end
%% find distance and angle from the middle centroid
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
midpoint = round(numel(s)/2);
middle = s(midpoint);
for p=1:numel(s)
if p ~= midpoint
N = s(p);
deltax = middle.Centroid(1)-N.Centroid(1);
deltay = middle.Centroid(2)-N.Centroid(2);
distance1(p) = sqrt((deltax.^2)+(deltay.^2));
distance(p) = round(distance1(p));
angle(p) = atand(deltay/deltax);
end
end
mindistance = min(distance(distance>0));
for p=1:numel(distance)
if distance(p) == mindistance
minangle = angle(p);
end
end
dif(1) = minangle-90;
dif(2) = minangle;
dif(3) = minangle+90;
adif = abs(dif);
adifmin = min(adif);
for q=1:numel(dif)
if abs(dif(q))==adifmin
anglechange = dif(q);
end
end
if anglechange>=45
anglechange = anglechange-90;
elseif anglechange<=-45
anglechange = anglechange+90;
end
D = imrotate(A,anglechange);
%% create a grid
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
[row, col] = size(D);
x = floor((col-1)/(mindistance));
y = floor((row-1)/(mindistance));
for xn=0:x
xpos(xn+1) = 1+xn*(mindistance);
end
for yn=0:y
ypos(yn+1) = 1+yn*(mindistance);
end
%% separate tiles
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
w = 1;
for inc = 1:numel(xpos)-1
for jnc = 1:numel(ypos)-1
singletile{w} = D(ypos(jnc):ypos(jnc+1),xpos(inc):xpos(inc+1));
w=w+1;
end
end

Respuesta aceptada

DGM
DGM el 18 de Mayo de 2023
Editada: DGM el 18 de Mayo de 2023
This isn't really an answer so much. I was going to look into it, but I found that it was easier to rewrite it in order to figure out what it was doing. This is where it's at:
% autocorrelation
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
B = abs(fftshift(ifft2(fft2(A).*conj(fft2(A)))))./numel(A);
imshow(imcomplement(B))
%%
% threshold the matrix and find centroids
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
checkstart = max(B(:));
checkstart = round(checkstart,2);
for check = checkstart:-0.01:0
C = B>check;
CC = bwconncomp(C); % this should be faster
if CC.NumObjects>=4 && CC.NumObjects<=10
break
end
end
s = regionprops(CC,'centroid'); % do this outside
imshow(imcomplement(C))
%%
% find distance and angle from the middle centroid
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
% find the actual geometrically-central blob
imcenter = fliplr(size(C,1:2))/2;
distfromcenter = sqrt(sum((vertcat(s.Centroid)-imcenter).^2,2));
[~,refidx] = min(distfromcenter); % the index of the reference peak
% find all other blobs
nonrefidx = 1:numel(s);
nonrefidx(refidx) = [];
% get distances and angles WRT the reference
delta = s(refidx).Centroid - vertcat(s(nonrefidx).Centroid);
distfromref = sqrt(sum(delta.^2,2))
anglefromref = atand(delta(:,2)./delta(:,1));
% minimize distance, get associated angle
[mindistance,idx] = min(distfromref);
minangle = anglefromref(idx);
% wrap the angle to (-45 45]
% this is the same as all the stuff with dif and the +-45 test
anglechange = 45 - mod(45 - minangle,90);
% rotate the image
D = imrotate(A,anglechange);
clc
mindistance
anglechange
imshow(imcomplement(D))
%%
% detile the image
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
% get tiling
sz = size(D,1:2);
mindistance = round(mindistance);
tiling = floor(sz./mindistance); % [y x]
% use mat2cell()
M = mindistance*ones(tiling(1),1); % tile size vectors
N = mindistance*ones(tiling(2),1);
Dt = D(1:mindistance*tiling(1),1:mindistance*tiling(2)); % crop
tiles = mat2cell(Dt,M,N); % detile
% show the tiles
montage(tiles,'border',10,'backgroundcolor','m')
All of the supplied images are similar in that they do not have a full repetition of the pattern in at least one direction. While there does seem to be enough information to discern the correct spacing, the given method of finding the mindistance gives the wrong result for notile.mat and a.mat (these are duplicates), it seems to be off by a factor of sqrt(2) when it fails.
The ok.mat file seems to detile fine, though these patterns are obviously not exact replications.
I'd have to think about it more to see what can be done for notile.mat.
EDIT:
I replaced the first part with this:
% autocorrelation
% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- %
B = normxcorr2(A,A); % this seems to be more reliable
B = imtophat(B,ones(21)); % tophat filter
B = mat2gray(B); % normalize
... and it seems to work for notile.mat now. The detiling routine still doesn't do anything useful in that case, since there's only one full tile in the image, but it at least gets the right distance.
  1 comentario
Mat
Mat el 22 de Mayo de 2023
Thank you very much DGM, in the following days I am going to test this solution, which seems to fit my needs.

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Más respuestas (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 17 de Mayo de 2023
Screenshots would help. Does your template (pattern you're searching the larger image for) change size or rotation when it's in the different locations? Have you tried normxcorr2 (demo attached)?
  1 comentario
Mat
Mat el 17 de Mayo de 2023
Editada: Mat el 17 de Mayo de 2023
Sorry but this is not what I meant. I am not looking for a certain template. I don't know the template. The original image is made of repetition of the same template. Like in your example, imagine the photo is made of all identical squares of onions. Please plot the *.mat files I attached to see what my images look like, or the image below, where the tile to be found is called original tile, and it is COMPLETELY replicated 4 times in the image
or in this one where there are MANY more repetitions (more than 50, case extreme just to understand)

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 18 de Mayo de 2023
If it's just a perfect replication of some tile, why can't you just scan across until a column or row is the same
[rows, columns] = size(m);
% First scan for a matching column
firstColumn= m(:, 1);
for col = 1 : columns
if isequal(firstColumn, m(:, col))
% This column is the same as the first so log it's size
tileWidth = col - 1;
break;
end
end
% Next scan for a matching row
firstRow = m(1, :);
for row = 1 : rows
if isequal(firstRow, m(row, :))
% This row is the same as the first so log it's size
tileHeight = row - 1;
break;
end
end
  1 comentario
DGM
DGM el 18 de Mayo de 2023
Editada: DGM el 18 de Mayo de 2023
The patterns are not grid-aligned.
EDIT: ... and they aren't replicated exactly either.

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