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@Article{optical07,
author = {Yael Termin and Gal A. Kaminka and Sarit Semo and Ari Z. Zivotofsky},
title = {Color Stereoscopic Images Require Only One Color Image},
journal = {Optical Engineering},
year = {2007},
OPTkey = {},
volume = {46},
number = {8},
pages = {087003-1--087003-11},
OPTmonth = {August},
note = {},
OPTannote = {},
abstract = {Utilizing remote color stereoscopic scenes typically
requires the acquisition, transmission, and processing of
two color images. However, the amount of information
transmitted and processed is large, compared to either
monocular images, or monochrome stereo images. Existing
approaches to addressing this challenge focus on
compression and optimization. This paper introduces an
innovative complementary approach to the presentation of a
color stereoscopic scene, specialized for human
perception. It relies on the hypothesis that a stereo pair
consisting of one monochromatic image and one color image
(MIX stereo pair) will be perceived by a human observer as
a 3D color scene. Taking advantage of color redundancy,
this presentation of a monochromatic-color pair allows for
a drastic reduction in the required bandwidth, even before
any compression method is employed. Herein we describe the
controlled psychophysical experiments of up to 15
subjects. These experiments tested both color and depth
perception using various combinations of color and
monochromatic images. The results show that subjects
perceived 3D color images even when they were presented
with only one color image in a stereoscopic pair. This
confirms the hypothesis, and validates the new approach.},
wwwnote = {},
}