3. PARTICIPANTS IN THE OEEPE TEST
In order to attain the scope of the working group it ap-
peared most appropriate to invite in a first phase the
manufacturer to scan the test material and to proceed on
an analysis of the scanned images. The members of the
working group intended to run different test on the mate-
rial and should be rather free to develop their proper
strategy. The synthesis of these analysis should then
allow to develop standard procedures for testing of scan-
ners. However the scanning of the material took much
longer time than planned. As only one test set was avail-
able composed of originals, the delay within one only or-
ganization extended seriously the scanning phase.
Therefore the analysis of the test material remained very
limited and only results of the pilot centre (Technical Uni-
versity of Lausanne) can be presented up to now.
The following firms have participated up to now in the
scanner test, which is highly appreciated :
Agfa, Mortsel, Belgium with the Agfa Horizon Plus
Intergraph, Huntsville USA with the PS1
Wehrli & Assoc, Valhalla USA, with the RM1
Helava, San Diego USA with the DSW200
Complementary scanning have been made by the follow-
ing organizations :
ICC Barcelona with the PS1
Cetop, Lausanne with the PS1
Institute of Photogrammetry of the ETH-Zirich with
the Agfa Horizon
Institute of Photogrammetry of the EPF-Lausanne
with the DSW200
4. ANALYSIS OF THE TEST MATERIAL
Although the invitation for the test scanning was sent out
in spring 1995, we disposed only beginning of February
1996 of some representative test material. The time for
the analysis was therefore very short and is by far not
finished. Earlier publications concentrated on the analy-
sis of black and white photographs and showed how to
determine the image noise, image resolution and the dy-
namic range (cf. [1],[2]). The current tests included reso-
lution patterns, photographed with aerial cameras on high
resolution film (test 6), colour test patterns (test 3) and
the gray wedge (test 2). It appeared of great interest to
accelerate the analysis of the image resolution and of the
colour reproduction, as these criterias have not been
treated earlier too intensively.
4.1 Image resolution
A lot was already discussed on image resolution and very
often the pixel resolution is considered as limiting factor.
However when analysing the reproduction of small ob-
jects in photographs, like signalized points one realizes
that the cut off frequency is not at all decisive, much
more important is the loss of contrast for larger frequen-
cies. This loss of contrast is given by the modulation
transfer function (MTF). In order to determine the MTF,
one should know the object function and of course the
image function, but which is anyhow given by the digitized
image. By computing the Fourier transforms one can then
determine the spread function or its Fourier transformed,
the modulation transfer function. By some simplifications
the modulation transfer function can also be deduced
58
from the contrast reduction of a rectangular pattern, a
way which was chosen here.
Fig. 1
Resolution pattern (test 6) and density profile scanned on
the DSW200.
Figure 1 shows a reproduction of the resolution target
(lower part) as negative. A density profile was determined
with the software tools of ISI of the ImageStation of Inter-
graph. One recognizes that the contrast diminishes with
the increasing frequencies and the signal vanish for fre-
quencies of about 50 lines/mm.
Contrast x 10 in %
A
10 |
| N
Sa
0 >
0 2 5 10 20 50 100
Frequency in lines/mm
Photoscan PS1 7.5 um
Rastermaster RM1 12 um
Agfa Horizon Plus — 20 um
Helava DSW200 12 um
PhotoScan PS1 15 um
Helava DSW200 photo 4x enlarged resampled 40 um corresponding to 10 um on original
Helava DSW200 photo 4x enlarged 10 um
ommoou»
Fig. 2
Modulation transfer function for different scanners.
Figure 2 gives an overview of the determined transfer
functions for the different scanners tested and different
image configurations. The best curve was obtained for a
simulated pixel size of 2.5 um for the Helava DSW200. In
this case the original photograph was enlarged 4 times on
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B6. Vienna 1996
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