How to measure the aspect ratio of a certain part of an image

5 views (last 30 days)
I am working with the mnist dataset and I am trying to calculate the aspect ratio of every number. The aspect ratio is defined as the minimum ractangular area that the number covers any idea how to do that?
  2 Comments
Rik
Rik on 28 Mar 2020
What have you tried so far? You must have had an idea.
Adam Danz
Adam Danz on 28 Mar 2020
If the rectangle is always parallel with the axes, you could use the boundingbox property of regionprops() to get the size of the rectangle.

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza on 28 Mar 2020
Edited: Ameer Hamza on 28 Mar 2020
Try this:
% im is the MNIST image
sum_row = sum(im, 2);
sum_col = sum(im, 1);
min_row = find(sum_row, 1);
max_row = find(sum_row, 1, 'last');
min_col = find(sum_col, 1);
max_col = find(sum_col, 1, 'last');
width = max_col-min_col+1;
height = max_row-min_row+1;
aspect_ratio = height/width;
This solution is also much faster then regionprops() and both give the same result as shown by following example
tic
sum_row = sum(im, 2);
sum_col = sum(im, 1);
min_row = find(sum_row, 1);
max_row = find(sum_row, 1, 'last');
min_col = find(sum_col, 1);
max_col = find(sum_col, 1, 'last');
width = max_col-min_col+1;
height = max_row-min_row+1;
aspect_ratio1 = height/width;
toc
tic
props = regionprops(imbinarize(im));
aspect_ratio2 = props.BoundingBox(4)/props.BoundingBox(3);
toc
Eq = isequal(aspect_ratio1, aspect_ratio2);
Result:
t1 =
2.6254e-04
>> t2
t2 =
0.0145
>> Eq
Eq =
logical
1
  5 Comments
Adam Danz
Adam Danz on 29 Mar 2020
Note that if the numbers in the image aren't already segmented, regionprops may come in handy.
Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza on 29 Mar 2020
Yes, this solution is just specific for the MNIST dataset. For a more general case, I will fail.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (0)

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!