Patents by Inventor Martin Rother

Martin Rother has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7215821
    Abstract: The invention relates to an image-processing method for automated contrast modification of digital image data. At least one low and one high-frequency signal are formed based on the digital image signal of the image data; the low-frequency signal component is modified using a characteristic-curve function; and then the modified, low-frequency signal is again added to the high-frequency signal component. In order to prevent the occurrence of distracting artifacts, so-called “halos”, the formation of the low-frequency signal component to be modified is formed in dependence upon the high-frequency image components.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 23, 2003
    Date of Patent: May 8, 2007
    Assignee: Imaging Solutions AG
    Inventors: Thomas Schuhrke, Martin Rother
  • Publication number: 20040057623
    Abstract: The invention concerns a method for the automated processing of digital image data in which the input image data are in compressed form, and in which several method steps must be applied to the compressed image data, or to the image data decompressed before processing, within the scope of image processing. Based on the invention, control data from the still-compressed image data are collected that automatically control the image processing steps.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 8, 2003
    Publication date: March 25, 2004
    Inventors: Thomas Schuhrke, Martin Rother
  • Publication number: 20040057630
    Abstract: The invention relates to an image-processing method for automated contrast modification of digital image data. At least one low and one high-frequency signal are formed based on the digital image signal of the image data; the low-frequency signal component is modified using a characteristic-curve function; and then the modified, low-frequency signal is again added to the high-frequency signal component. In order to prevent the occurrence of distracting artifacts, so-called “halos”, the formation of the low-frequency signal component to be modified is formed in dependence upon the high-frequency image components.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 23, 2003
    Publication date: March 25, 2004
    Inventors: Thomas Schuhrke, Martin Rother