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Shortest Length Total Orders Do Not Minimize Irregularity in Vector-Valued Mathematical Morphology

Mathematical morphology is a theory concerned with non-linear operators for image processing and analysis. The underlying framework for mathematical morphology is a partially ordered set with well-defined supremum and infimum operations. Because vectors can be ordered in many ways, finding appropriate ordering schemes is a major challenge in mathematical morphology for vector-valued images, such as color and hyperspectral images. In this context, the irregularity issue plays a key role in designing effective morphological operators. Briefly, the irregularity follows from a disparity between the ordering scheme and a metric in the value set. Determining an ordering scheme using a metric provide reasonable approaches to vector-valued mathematical morphology. Because total orderings correspond to paths on the value space, one attempt to reduce the irregularity of morphological operators would be defining a total order based on the shortest length path. However, this paper shows that the total ordering associated with the shortest length path does not necessarily imply minimizing the irregularity.

preprint2023arXivOpen access
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