Imaging

Imaging is the representation or reproduction of
an object's form; especially a visual representation (i.e., the formation of
an image).
Imaging technology is the application of
materials and methods to create, preserve, or duplicate images.
Imaging science is a multidisciplinary field
concerned with the generation, collection, duplication, analysis, modification,
and visualization of images, including imaging things that the human
eye cannot detect. As an evolving field it includes research and
researchers from physics, mathematics, electrical
engineering, computer vision, computer science, and perceptual
psychology.
Imager are imaging sensors.
Contents
- 1: Imaging chain
- 2: Subfields
- 3: Methodologies
- 4: Examples
Imaging chain
The foundation of imaging science as a discipline is the
"imaging chain" – a conceptual model describing all of the factors
which must be considered when developing a system for creating visual
renderings (images). In general, the links of the imaging chain include:
- The
human visual system. Designers must also consider
the psychophysical processes which take place in human beings as
they make sense of information received through the visual system.
- The
subject of the image. When developing an imaging system, designers
must consider the observables associated with the subjects which will be
imaged. These observables generally take the form of emitted or reflected
energy, such as electromagnetic energy or mechanical
energy.
- The
capture device. Once the observables associated with the subject are
characterized, designers can then identify and integrate the technologies
needed to capture those observables. For example, in the case of
consumer digital cameras, those technologies include optics for
collecting energy in the visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum,
and electronic detectors for converting the electromagnetic energy into an
electronic signal.
- The
processor. For all digital imaging systems, the electronic
signals produced by the capture device must be manipulated by an algorithm
which formats the signals so they can be displayed as an image. In
practice, there are often multiple processors involved in the creation of
a digital image.
- The
display. The display takes the electronic signals which have been
manipulated by the processor and renders them on some visual medium.
Examples include paper (for printed, or "hard copy" images),
television, computer monitor, or projector.
Note that some imaging scientists will include additional
"links" in their description of the imaging chain. For example, some
will include the "source" of the energy which "illuminates"
or interacts with the subject of the image. Others will include storage and/or
transmission systems.
Subfields
Subfields within imaging science include: image
processing, computer vision, 3D computer
graphics, animations, atmospheric optics, astronomical
imaging, biological imaging, digital image restoration, digital
imaging, color science, digital
photography, holography, magnetic resonance imaging, medical
imaging, microdensitometry, optics, photography, remote
sensing, radar imaging, radiometry, silver
halide, ultrasound imaging, photoacoustic imaging, thermal
imaging, visual perception, and various printing technologies.
Methodologies
- Acoustic imaging
- Chemical imaging, the simultaneous
measurement of spectra and pictures
- Digital imaging, creating digital images,
generally by scanning or through digital photography
- Disk image, a file which contains the exact
content of a data storage medium
- Document imaging, replicating documents
commonly used in business
- Geophysical imaging
- Industrial process imaging
- Medical imaging, creating images of the human
body or parts of it, to diagnose or examine disease
- Medical optical imaging
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- Molecular imaging
- Radar imaging, or imaging radar, for
obtaining an image of an object, not just its location and speed
- Range imaging, for obtaining images with
depth information
- Reprography, reproduction of graphics through
electrical and mechanical means
- Cinematography
- Photography, the process of creating still
images
- Xerography, the method of photocopying
- Speckle imaging, a method of shift-and-add
for astronomical imaging
- Stereo imaging, an aspect of sound recording
and reproduction concerning spatial locations of the performers
- Thermography, infrared imaging
- Tactile imaging, also known as elastography
Examples
Imaging technology materials and methods include:
- Computer graphics
- Virtual camera system used in computer
and video games and virtual
cinematography
- Microfilm and Micrographics
- Visual arts
- Etching
- Drawing and Technical drawing
- Film
- Painting
- Photography
- Multiple-camera setup enables stereoscopy and stereophotogrammetry
- Light-field camera (basically
refocusable photography)
- Printmaking
- Sculpture
- Infrared
- Radar imagery
- Ultrasound
- Multi-spectral image
- Electro-optical sensor
- Charge-coupled device
- Ground-penetrating radar
- Electron microscope
- Imagery analysis
- Medical radiography
- Industrial radiography
- LIDAR
- Structured-light 3D scanner