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Hybrid images

Published:01 July 2006Publication History
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Abstract

We present hybrid images, a technique that produces static images with two interpretations, which change as a function of viewing distance. Hybrid images are based on the multiscale processing of images by the human visual system and are motivated by masking studies in visual perception. These images can be used to create compelling displays in which the image appears to change as the viewing distance changes. We show that by taking into account perceptual grouping mechanisms it is possible to build compelling hybrid images with stable percepts at each distance. We show examples in which hybrid images are used to create textures that become visible only when seen up-close, to generate facial expressions whose interpretation changes with viewing distance, and to visualize changes over time within a single picture.

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  1. Hybrid images

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            Albert Lindsey Zobrist

            Hybrid images is a technique for combining two (or potentially more) different images so that viewing at different distances gives a stable percept of one or the other, or sometimes an odd combination of the two images. The technique involves subjecting one image to a low-pass filter and the other to a high-pass filter, and then superimposing the two results. The two images have to be compatible enough so that seeing one leaves the other as some kind of shadow or blur. The paper contains about ten examples, several of which are spectacular. Explaining this phenomenon seems to require some ancient ideas from Gestalt psychology, as well as more modern ideas from visual psychophysics. Current models of the visual processing of the brain will no doubt be affected by experiments with hybrid images, especially those involving the role of spatial frequencies leading up to perceptual grouping. An excellent discussion of this is given in the paper, and 19 references are provided. Online Computing Reviews Service

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            • Published in

              cover image ACM Transactions on Graphics
              ACM Transactions on Graphics  Volume 25, Issue 3
              July 2006
              742 pages
              ISSN:0730-0301
              EISSN:1557-7368
              DOI:10.1145/1141911
              Issue’s Table of Contents

              Copyright © 2006 ACM

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              Publication History

              • Published: 1 July 2006
              Published in tog Volume 25, Issue 3

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