ECHANISM FOR ACCESSING DIGITIZED IMAGE DATABASE TO PROVIDE ITERATIVELY IMPROVED DISPLAY RESOLUTION
FIELD OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates in general to digitized image data processing systems and is particularly directed to a mechanism for accessing the contents of a two-dimensional image-representative database and rapidly displaying an image the resolution of which is iteratively increased during successive scans of the database.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Digital imaging systems, such as those employed for converting still color photographic slides into a digital format for display on a color television monitor, customarily encode the output of an electronic imaging device, such as a digital color camera, to some prescribed resolution and store the encoded image in an associated database as a respective image file on a digital storage medium. When it is desired to display a particular stored image, the contents of the respective addresses of the database in which the digitized image has been stored are read out and coupled to display driver circuitry for energizing corresponding pixels of a display device.
With continuing improvements in digital storage media density and recording technology, it has been possible to increase both the image capacity and resolution of the digital database, so that the image quality produced from the image database, by means of a high resolution output device, such as a high definition color display or high resolution thermal printer, is substantially indistinguishable from the quality produced by directly linking the digital color
camera to the output device. Unfortunately, coupling the stored image in the database to the output device cannot take place instantaneously; the contents of the respective addresses of the database must be clocked out to the corresponding pixels of the display. Even with the improved operational speed of present day digital storage media, there is some finite access time associated with each digital byte of information used to represent the image, so that as the size of the image array is increased in order to provide a higher resolution output image, the length of time required to access the entire image necessarily increases. As a consequence, in applications where the data rate of the digital storage device is fixed at a relatively moderate speed, for example at the 167.4 kbytes/sec rate of current compact disc players, an individual desiring to view a stored high resolution image, for example a 2048 X 3072 (2K by 3K) pixel array, must wait while a read-out clock that is compatible with the operational speed of the digital storage device (CD player) calls up from memory each of the data entries associated with the respective pixels of the image. Obviously, the higher the image resolution, the longer it takes for the image to be displayed. Thus, should the viewer wish to "electronically thumb through" a plurality of images or even identify a single image on the disc, the slow access time constitutes a major hindrance to that effort, which is particularly objectionable due to the extremely fast response time of the human visual system.
In accordance with the present invention, the considerable "viewing delay" encountered in accessing a digital image from a relatively high resolution database using a conventional sequential data access scheme is substantially reduced by a readout and
display control mechanism that rapidly provides the viewer with an initially relatively low resolution image and thereafter automatically increases the resolution of the displayed image. By presenting the viewer with such a "quick-view" image, the present invention enables the viewer to determine whether the image being displayed is of interest, so that the viewer has the immediate option of calling up another stored image or permitting the currently displayed low resolution image to be iteratively enhanced. To this end the present invention incorporates a memory addressing mechanism through which first partitioned data entries of the image database, which are respectively associated with a two- dimensional sub-array of R X S picture elements of the image and the spatial resolution of which is less than that of the M X N picture elements of the display, are sequentially accessed at the transfer rate of the digital storage device (e.g. the above-referenced 167.4 kbytes/sec rate of a compact disc player) and stored in a corresponding sub-array of R X S pixels in the playback device. Because, the size of the R X S sub- array is a fraction (e.g. one-fourth) of the M X N picture elements of the display, it is necessary to interpolate the remaining (adjacent) display pixels.
To simplify processing, the interpolation mechanism is preferably executed by replicating each accessed data value for one or more adjacent pixels, so that each respective pixel of image data from the first partitioned picture region R X S sub-array, is initially coupled to a selected plurality (e.g. four) of display pixels, thereby rapidly providing the viewer with a low resolution image.
Thereafter, as database read-out continues, additional partitioned R X S sub-arrays of data
entries, associated with pixels whose values were originally replicated from the first R X S sub-array are accessed, so that successive sub-arrays of (replicated) pixel values are iteratively replaced by actual data values from the database. After a plurality (e.g. four) of the R X S sub-arrays are read out from database into the playback device, at the CD player's (low speed) transfer rate, this successive sub-array replacement operation will result in a final display having an increased resolution image.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 diagrammatically illustrates a photographic color slide processing system in which the present invention may be employed;
Figure 2 diagrammatically shows a 512 row by 768 column array of image picture elements (pixels) ;
Figure 3 diagrammatically shows the sub-array components of an 8 X 8 pixel image;
Figure 4 diagrammatically illustrates replicating each accessed data value for a plurality of four adjacent pixels;
Figures 5, 6 and 7 diagrammatically illustrate the iterative updating of the output image obtained by sequentially accessing the four partitioned sub-arrays of the image database of Figure 3.
Before describing in detail the iteratively increased resolution database access and display mechanism in accordance with the present invention, it should be observed that the present invention resides primarily in a novel structural combination of conventional image processing circuits and components and not in the particular detailed configurations thereof. Accordingly, the structure, control and
arrangement of these conventional circuits and components have been illustrated in the drawings by readily understandable block diagrams which show only those specific details that are pertinent to the present invention, so as not to obscure the disclosure with structural details which will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of the description herein. Thus, the block diagram illustrations of the drawings do not necessarily represent the mechanical structural arrangement of the exemplary system, but are primarily intended to illustrate the major structural components of the system in a convenient functional grouping, whereby the present invention may be more readily understood. Figure 1 diagrammatically illustrates a photographic color film processing system in which the present invention may be employed. For purposes of the present description such a system may be of the type described, for example, in co-pending Patent application Serial Number , filed , by S. Kristy, entitled "Multiresolution Digital Imagery Photofinishing System, " assigned to the assignee of the present application and the disclosure of which is incorporated herein. However, it should be observed that the system described in the above-referenced co- pending application is merely an example of one type of system in which the invention may be used and is not to be considered limitative of the invention. In general, the invention may be incorporated in any digitized imagery processing system.
In accordance with the digital image processing system of Figure 1, photographic images, such as those captured on 35mm negatives 10, are scanned by a high resolution opto-electronic film scanner 12, such as a commercially available Eikonix
Model 1435 scanner. Scanner 12 outputs digitally encoded data representative of the response of its image sensing array onto which the photographic image contained on a respective color negative is projected. This digitally encoded data, or "digitized" image, is coupled in the form of an imaging pixel array- representative bit map to an attendant image processing workstation 14, which contains a frame store and image processing application software through which the digitized image may be processed (e.g. enlarged, rotated, cropped, subjected to scene color balance correction, etc.) to achieve a desired image appearance. Once an image file has been prepared, it is written onto a transportable medium, such as an optical compact disc 16, for subsequent playback by a disc player 20 which allows the image to be displayed, for example, on a relatively moderate resolution consumer television set 22, or printed as a finished color print, using a high resolution thermal color printer 24.
In accordance with the image processing system described in the above referenced co-pending application, each captured image is stored as a respective image data file in the form of a low resolution image bit map file and a plurality of residual images associated with respectively different degrees of image resolution. By iteratively combining successive residual images with the low resolution image, successively increased resolution images may be recovered from the low resolution image for application to a readout device such as a color video display or hard copy printer.
As an example, the low resolution bit map file to which the original high resolution image is reduced may comprise a 512 row by 768 column array of
pixel values, as diagrammatically shown in Figure 2, and such that there is substantially a one-for-one correspondence between the spatial values of the low resolution image array and the pixels of an associated display, such as the 480 X 640 "square pixel" display capability of an NTSC television receiver, where the center 480 rows and 640 columns of the database pixels correspond, one-for-one, with the display pixels. The stored 512 row by 768 column image is preferably formatted into a plurality (e.g. four) partitioned sub- arrays, respective image locations of which are immediately adjacent to one another, so as to form an array of contiguous image components. For the example of formatting a 512 X 768 array into four partitioned sub-arrays, the database may be considered to comprise a 256 X 384 array of "blocks-of-four" image components 1, 2, 3 and 4, several of which are shown in Figure 2. In order to simplify the illustrations in the drawings, rather than treat the parameters of a 512 X 768 image array, the discussion to follow will treat an image comprised of eight rows R1...R8 and eight columns C1...C8 of image values, as diagrammatically shown in Figure 3. It should be observed that the example of an 8 X 8 image is merely for purposes of simplifying the description and illustration and, like the 512 X 768 pixel image, referenced above, is not to be considered limitative of the invention.
The 8 X 8 pixel image of Figure 3 is depicted as comprising a 4 X 4 array of partitioned "blocks-of- four" image blocks B1...B16, each of which contains four adjacent pixels. Image block Bl contains pixels 1-1, 1-2, 1-3 and 1-4. Similarly, image block B2 contains pixels 2-1, 2-2, 2-3 and 2-4, and so on, down through block B16, which contains pixels 16-1, 16-2, 16-3 and 16-4.
In accordance with the database accessing scheme employed by the present invention, during the initial read-out of the database, only one of the partitioned sub-arrays of pixels (1-1...1-16) is accessed for the purpose of regenerating the entire image (all four pixels in each of blocks B1...B16). Thereafter, the remaining "replicated" entries of the image are successively "filled-in" with their true values, until the image is completed. More particularly, when a digitized image read out by CD player in Figure 1 from compact disc 16 is to be displayed on video display 22, the first partitioned sub-array of pixel values (1-1...1-16 in Figure 3) is transferred to a video framestore resident in CD player 20. As the first sub-array of pixels is transferred and stored in the CD player framestore, the framestore is addressed so as to store the respective entries of only one of its low resolution sub-arrays, such as 4 X 4 sub-array 1, containing sub-array data entries 1-1...1-16. Because the size of the first partitioned sub-array is only a fraction (here, one- fourth) of the size of the display array, it is necessary to interpolate the remaining (adjacent) display pixels. To simplify processing, the interpolation mechanism is preferably executed by replicating each pixel value of the first partitioned sub-array for one or more adjacent pixels, as diagrammatically illustrated in Figure 4, so that each respective pixel of the first partitioned sub-array (1- 1...1-16) is initially coupled to a selected plurality (here four) of display pixels, thereby rapidly providing the viewer with a low resolution image. In terms of the parameters of the 512 X 768 pixel bit¬ mapped image file referenced above and a 480 X 640 pixel display, what is initially displayed is a "lower"
resolution display of 240 X 320 independent image data values that occupy or "fill" the overall 480 X 640 pixel matrix of the color display device. While the 240 X 320 displayed image is not a "high" (e.g. 2048 X 3072) resolution image, or even a low resolution image equivalent to the 480 X 640 resolution of the color TV monitor, it has sufficient definition to permit the viewer to decide whether to leave the image on the screen or to call up another image. Thereafter, as diagrammatically represented by the sequence illustrated in Figures 5, 6 and 7, during subsequent reading of the database in accordance with the data transfer rate of the CD player, additional partitioned sub-arrays 2, 3 and 4, which contain the true values of the originally replicated pixels in the array of Figure 4, are called up, so that successive sub-arrays of replicated pixel values within the displayed image are replaced by their true data values. Thus, after the plurality (here four) of partitioned sub-arrays have been read from the database at the slow CD data transfer rate, the successive sub- array replacement process will result in a finally displayed "increased" resolution image. The phrase "increased" resolution image is intended to mean an image whose resolution is greater than that originally presented using only the first partitioned sub-array , as shown in Figure 4. For example, in the case of the 512 X 768 pixel bit-mapped database image, the originally displayed image is a 240 X 320 pixel image, while the final "increased" resolution image is a 480 X 640 pixel image. The "increased" resolution image is not necessarily the maximum resolution image available after iterative residual processing of the bit-mapped image within the original database which provides a "high" resolution image, for example a 2048 X 3072
pixel image suitable for producing a high quality color print.
As will be appreciated from the foregoing description, by rapidly providing the viewer with an initially relatively low resolution image and thereafter iteratively increasing the resolution the displayed image, the present invention is able to substantially reduce the considerable "viewing delay" encountered when accessing a digital image from a relatively high resolution database using a conventional sequential low speed data transfer scheme. By presenting the viewer with such a "quick-view" image, the present invention enables the viewer to determine whether the image being displayed is of interest, so that the viewer has the immediate option of calling up another stored image or permitting the currently displayed low resolution image to be iteratively enhanced.
While we have shown and described an embodiment in accordance with the present invention, it is to be understood that the same is not limited thereto but is susceptible to numerous changes and modifications as known to a "person skilled in the art, and we therefore do not wish to be limited to the details shown and described herein but intend to cover all such changes and modifications as are obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art.