Image Analogies
Aaron Hertzmann, Charles E. Jacobs, Nuria Oliver, Brian Curless, David H. Salesin
Proceedings of SIGGRAPH 2001, August 2001, pp. 327--340.
Abstract: This paper describes a new framework for processing images by example, called "image analogies." The framework involves two stages: a design phase, in which a pair of images, with one image purported to be a "filtered" version of the other, is presented as "training data"; and an application phase, in which the learned filter is applied to some new target image in order to create an "analogous" filtered result. Image analogies are based on a simple multi-scale autoregression, inspired primarily by recent results in texture synthesis. By choosing different types of source image pairs as input, the framework supports a wide variety of "image filter" effects, including traditional image filters, such as blurring or embossing; improved texture synthesis, in which some textures are synthesized with higher quality than by previous approaches; super-resolution, in which a higher-resolution image is inferred from a low-resolution source; texture transfer, in which images are "texturized" with some arbitrary source texture; artistic filters, in which various drawing and painting styles are synthesized based on scanned real-world examples; and texture-by-numbers, in which realistic scenes, composed of a variety of textures, are created using a simple painting interface.
Keyword(s): example-based rendering, texture synthesis, non-photorealistic rendering, Markov random fields, autoregression, texture-by-numbers, texture transfer
BibTeX format:
@inproceedings{Hertzmann:2001:IA,
  author = {Aaron Hertzmann and Charles E. Jacobs and Nuria Oliver and Brian Curless and David H. Salesin},
  title = {Image Analogies},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of SIGGRAPH 2001},
  pages = {327--340},
  month = aug,
  year = {2001},
}
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