DWT lossless or lossy compression??

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slama najla
slama najla on 8 Sep 2012
hello please, the discrete wavelet transform DWT decomposes which allows the image to 4 subbands: LL, HL, LH and HH is a lossless or lossy compression?? thank

Answers (1)

Wayne King
Wayne King on 13 Sep 2012
Edited: Wayne King on 13 Sep 2012
Just by itself, the DWT is lossless, because you can simply invert the transform. However, if you are really going to compress the image, then you are by definition modifying the coefficients and you have lossy compression.
For example:
x = magic(4);
[ca,ch,cv,cd] = dwt2(x,'db1','mode','sym');
X = idwt2(ca,ch,cv,cd,'db1','mode','sym');
max(abs(X-x))
In practice, the above is not useful. So you would modify the coeffcients in a way that you would not be able to get back the original image exactly -- hence lossy.

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