EECS 396L/490: Digital Image Processing

Fall 2004, Prof. Frank Merat


General Information

Class Lectures: TR 4:30-5:45pm, Rockefeller 309
Course Instructor: Frank Merat, flm at po.cwru.edu, Glennan 518, x4572
Teaching Assistant: Xiying (Frank) Li, xxl20 at po.cwru.edu
Instructor's Office Hours:
 
Required Text

Syllabus


Homework


Computer Assignments


Mid-term and Final Projects

Report format (Mid-term and Final Projects only)


Student Papers

Student papers from the Fall 2004 semester are now available for downloading.


Resources


MATLAB


POWER POINT PRESENTATIONS


Images for various assignments


Lecture Notes/Other Course Material

PPT notes with my lecture notes.

Other Resources


Other Course References


Digital Image Processing at Other School

It is often interesting to compare what we do in EECS 490 to that done in similar classes at other schools.

UC Riverside's EE241 Advanced Digital Image Processing.
Penn State's CSE/EE 485 Digital Image Processing I.
CMU's cpe496 Rendering and Image Processing.
Columbia's E4830 Digital Image Processing.
Rice's ELEC 539 Digital Image Processing.
Stanford's EE368 Digital Image Processing.
MIT's 6.344 Two-Dimensional Signal and Image Processing.
Iowa's 55.148 Digital Image Processing.
UC Santa Barbara's ECE 178 Digital Image Processing has an interesting project on steganography.
George Mason's CS686 Image Processing and Applications.
George Mason's ECE537 Introduction to Digital Image Processing.
SMU's EE 7374 Digital Image Processing.
Utah's CS 6964 Image Processing for Graphics and Vision.
Colorado's ECEN 5672 Digital Image Processing.
Missouri's CS 4650/7650 Image Processing.
Southern Maine's ELE489 Digital Image Processing.

More will be added. Let me know if you come across any other interesting courses.



Useful Links

Check out CMU's Computer Vision Home Page for links to conferences, software, research groups, test images, and the like.

You should also read IEEE's Transactions on Image Processing for the latest research. This site requires you be in the campus network or connected by VPN!

NIH has developed a pretty extensive public domain image processing program called NIH Image. This program was originally developed for the Mac and is now also available by Scion for the PC.


Interesting Image Processing Applications

Image registration and image warping is used to create Sportvision's "1st and 10" lines for broadcast football games.

Another common image processing application is automatic license plate recognition which can be used for everything from parking lot access to automatic speeding ticketing.


Created: 2004-6-21. Last Modified: 2006-8-18.