Directional cubic convolution interpolation
Directional cubic convolution interpolation (DCCI) is an edge-directed image scaling algorithm created by Dengwen Zhou and Xiaoliu Shen.[1]
By taking into account the edges in an image, this scaling algorithm reduces artifacts common to other image scaling algorithms.[which?] For example, staircase artifacts on diagonal lines and curves are eliminated.
The algorithm resizes an image to 2x its original dimensions, minus 1.[citation needed]
See also
- Image scaling
- Bilinear interpolation
- Bicubic interpolation
- Spline interpolation
- Lanczos resampling
- Comparison gallery of image scaling algorithms
References
- ↑ Zhou, D.; Shen, X.; Dong, W. (24 August 2012). "Image Zooming Using Directional Cubic Convolution Interpolation (Paper and Code)". IET Image Processing. 6 (6): 627–634. doi:10.1049/iet-ipr.2011.0534. Retrieved 13 September 2015 – via MATLAB Central File Exchange.
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