How 'imread' function works in Matlab?
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Mohammed Sadeq
el 21 de Feb. de 2017
Comentada: Mohammed Sadeq
el 22 de Feb. de 2017
Hi,
I am using 'imread' function in Matlab to read images produced by X-Ray CT. Those images are in the greyscale.
When I use the 'imread' function, Matlab returns an array with the same size of the image but with numbers inside the cells (matrix is attached). The number represent a single pixel in that image while the minimum number is 3107 and the maximum is 40899.
I want to know how those numbers are calculated?
Thanks..
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Walter Roberson
el 22 de Feb. de 2017
The png file you posted is 8 bits per channel, uint8, 3 channel, with a transparency (alpha) channel that is set to all 255 (uint8) which is completely opaque.
The .mat file you posted relates to a different image, and is a matrix of uint16 values.
Are you asking how the uint16 is represented inside the file? If so then the answer is that they are stored in http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2384111/png-file-format-endianness "Network Byte Order", more commonly known as "Big Endian". That is a byte order in which the most significant of the bytes occurs first and then the less significant. That is the opposite of the order used by the x86 architecture, but it is the same as the order reflected by dec2hex and sprintf() with '%x' format.
What do the values correspond to, what units are they? I would put it to you that the images have been extracted from DICOM files without the relevant headers. See http://www.idlcoyote.com/fileio_tips/hounsfield.html
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Adam
el 21 de Feb. de 2017
They aren't 'calculated', they are read in from the file as the name 'imread' and the help suggest.
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Adam
el 22 de Feb. de 2017
imread literally reads what is stored in the file. How those numbers were calculated comes from whatever process was used to create the image and save it originally.
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