Interactive Images are a natural extension of three recent developments: digital photography, interactive web pages, and browsable video. An interactive image is a multi-dimensional image, displayed two dimensions at a time (like a standard digital image), but with which a user can interact to browse through the other dimensions. One might consider a standard video sequence viewed with a video player as a simple interactive image with time as the third dimension. Interactive images are a generalization of this idea, in which the third (and greater) dimensions may be focus, exposure, white balance, saturation, and other parameters. Interaction is handled via a variety of modes including those we call ordinal, pixel-indexed, cumulative, and comprehensive. Through exploration of three novel forms of interactive images based on color, exposure, and focus, we will demonstrate the compelling nature of interactive images.
Author(s): | Toyama, K. and Schölkopf, B. |
Number (issue): | MSR-TR-2003-64 |
Year: | 2003 |
Day: | 0 |
Bibtex Type: | Technical Report (techreport) |
Digital: | 0 |
Electronic Archiving: | grant_archive |
Institution: | Microsoft Research, Cambridge, UK |
Language: | en |
Organization: | Max-Planck-Gesellschaft |
School: | Biologische Kybernetik |
Links: |
BibTex
@techreport{5644, title = {Interactive Images}, abstract = {Interactive Images are a natural extension of three recent developments: digital photography, interactive web pages, and browsable video. An interactive image is a multi-dimensional image, displayed two dimensions at a time (like a standard digital image), but with which a user can interact to browse through the other dimensions. One might consider a standard video sequence viewed with a video player as a simple interactive image with time as the third dimension. Interactive images are a generalization of this idea, in which the third (and greater) dimensions may be focus, exposure, white balance, saturation, and other parameters. Interaction is handled via a variety of modes including those we call ordinal, pixel-indexed, cumulative, and comprehensive. Through exploration of three novel forms of interactive images based on color, exposure, and focus, we will demonstrate the compelling nature of interactive images.}, number = {MSR-TR-2003-64}, organization = {Max-Planck-Gesellschaft}, institution = {Microsoft Research, Cambridge, UK}, school = {Biologische Kybernetik}, year = {2003}, slug = {5644}, author = {Toyama, K. and Sch{\"o}lkopf, B.} }