380
R(K,P) = E(I; om (Lak 34p m) = 75^, oes "s (k)s(p) (11)
2.3 Image Transform Statistics
Applying a two dimensional Karhunen-Loeve or Hotelling unitary
transforamtion of size N? to the image defined in the preceeding
paragraph, it can be shown (Ref. 1) that the first and second order
statistics of the transform coefficients, Zn ? are repectively given by:
O0 for nyt t 0
E(25 ps (12a)
2 mN for. n 2$ s
n,2 0,....,N-1
: 2 2
EC(Zn,e-"n,2)(Zr,s-"p,5)? = {GA 8, +01 hhä(n«r) S68-8)
farn,2= 0,.. 1.81 7 sit (12b)
where:
Uno ^ E(Z, 2)
N-1
d ; 2 2 2, 2
nz m Engl / to
2=0
N-1
s 24.2. 2, 2
JUR. = EU 2" vin /No, 7p A
What is learned from equation (12) is that:
a) the transform coefficients are uncorrelated and their variances
are product separable in row and column indices.
b) the variance of the transform coefficients due to speckle is the
same for all coefficients and hence the speckle component can be
regarded as an additive uncorrelated random variable to the
coefficient value given by the unspeckled image.
The properties of the second order statistics given by (12b) are satisfied
for a two dimensional cosine transform of transform size N — e and the
variance of the transform coefficients is given by the two dimensional
Fourier transform of the image covariance function given by (11). Hence,
2 co oo Kmn mn
Ya Z ZR exp-i{— *—1 (13)
E(7, 77
zm pz» P N N
n,
It follows for ^, and 8, defined in (12b):
An = (14a)
n z TN