Offset-print mottling measurement using machine vision


Autoria(s): Salmela, Petja
Data(s)

04/02/2008

04/02/2008

2003

Resumo

Mottling is one of the key defects in offset-printing. Mottling can be defined as unwanted unevenness of print. In this work, diameter of a mottle spot is defined between 0.5-10.0 mm. There are several types of mottling, but the reason behind the problem is still not fully understood. Several commercial machine vision products for the evaluation of print unevenness have been presented. Two of these methods used in these products have been implemented in this thesis. The one is the cluster method and the other is the band-pass method. The properties of human vision system have been taken into account in the implementation of these two methods. An index produced by the cluster method is a weighted sum of the number of found spots, and an index produced by band-pass method is a weighted sum of coefficients of variations of gray-levels for each spatial band. Both methods produce larger indices for visually poor samples, so they can discern good samples from the poor ones. The difference between the indices for good and poor samples is slightly larger produced by the cluster method. 11 However, without the samples evaluated by human experts, the goodness of these results is still questionable. This comparison will be left to the next phase of the project.

Identificador

http://www.doria.fi/handle/10024/36030

Idioma(s)

en

Palavras-Chave #machine vision #Mottling #Offset-print #paper-making industry #paper printability #digital image processing #frequency analysis
Tipo

Diplomityö

Master's thesis