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GLOSSARY - DIGITAL IMAGING |
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The examples below are all 450%
increases in size of this 106 x 40 crop from an image. Bilinear Interpolation
determines the value of a new pixel based on a weighted average of
the 4 pixels in the nearest 2 x -2
neighborhood of the pixel in the original image. The
averaging has an anti-aliasing effect and therefore produces
relatively smooth edges with hardly any jaggies.
Bicubic interpolation is more sophisticated and
produces smoother edges than bilinear interpolation. Notice for instance
the smoother eyelashes in the example below. Here, a new pixel is a
bicubic function using 16 pixels in the nearest 4 x 4 neighborhood of
the pixel in the original image. This is the method most commonly used
by image editing software, printer drivers and many digital cameras for
resampling images. As mentioned in my review, Adobe Photoshop CS offers
two variants of the bicubic interpolation method: bicubic smoother and
bicubic sharper.
Fractal interpolation is mainly useful for extreme
enlargements (for large prints) as it retains the shape of things more
accurately with cleaner, sharper edges and less halos and blurring
around the edges than bicubic interpolation would do. An example is
Genuine Fractals Pro from The Altamira Group. |
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