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I want to generate a heat map image of a floor. I have the following things:

  1. A black & white .png image of the floor
  2. A three column array stored in Matlab. -- The first two columns indicate the X & Y coordinates of the floorpan image -- The third coordinate denotes the "temperature" of that particular coordinate

I want to generate a heat map of the floor that will show the "temperature" strength in those coordinates. However, I want to display the heat map on top of the floor plan so that the viewers can see which rooms lead to which "temperatures".

Is there any software that does this job? Can I use Matlab or Python to do this?

Thanks,

Nazmul

2 Answers 2

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One way to do this would be:

1) Load in the floor plan image with Matlab or NumPy/matplotlib.

2) Use some built-in edge detection to locate the edge pixels in the floor plan.

3) Form a big list of (x,y) locations where an edge is found in the floor plan.

4) Plot your heat map

5) Scatterplot the points of the floor plan as an overlay.

It sounds like you know how to do each of these steps individually, so all you'll need to do is look up some stuff on how to overlay plots onto the same axis, which is pretty easy in both Matlab and matplotlib.

If you're unfamiliar, the right commands look at are things like meshgrid and surf, possibly contour and their Python equivalents. I think Matlab has a built-in for Canny edge detection. I believe this was more difficult in Python, but if you use the PIL library, the Mahotas library, the scikits.image library, and a few others tailored for image manipulation, it's not too bad. SciPy may actually have an edge filter by now though, so check there first.

The only sticking point will be if your (x,y) data for the temperature are not going to line up with the (x,y) pixel locations in the image. In that case, you'll have to play around with some x-scale factor and y-scale factor to transform your heat map's coordinates into pixel coordinates first, and then plot the heat map, and then the overlay should work.

This is a fairly low-tech way to do it; I assume you just need a quick and dirty plot to illustrate how something's working. This method does have the advantage that you can change the style of the floorplan points easily, making them larger, thicker, thinner, different colors, or transparent, depending on how you want it to interact with the heat map. However, to do this for real, use GIMP, Inkscape, or Photoshop and overlay the heatmap onto the image after the fact.

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  • thanks for the reply. I am planning to use tKinter -> canvas.create_oval and show points of different color in my image. 1. Load the image using tKinter. 2. For every coordinate (x,y) of my data, I want to use something like: canvas.create_oval(x,y,x+1,y+1,fill="red"). Now, instead of using a fixed color like "red", I want to use a heat map based color that represents the "temperature" of that point. Is it possible?
    – Nazmul
    Aug 13, 2012 at 2:13
  • I'm sure it's possible, but this is way way overkill. Matplotlib and NumPy already have built-in functions that can compute the grid for your points, and surface and mesh functions that can overlay the heat data. The only tricky part is overlaying the floor plan boundaries. I think you should overlay the floor plan after you display the heatmap, again, by using some sort of edge detection on the floor plan image to get the pixels for the floor plan boundaries. This too is built-in with libraries like Python's PIL and SciPy. Going all the way to GUI programming for this is overkill.
    – ely
    Aug 13, 2012 at 2:49
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I would take a look at using Python with a module called Polygon

Polygon will allow you to draw up the room using geometric shapes and I believe you can just do the borders of a room as an overlay on your black and white image. While I haven't used to a whole lot at this point, I do know that you only need a single (x,y) coordinate pair to be able to "hit test" against the given shape and then use that "hit test" to know the shape who's color you'd want to change.

Ultimately I think polygon would make your like a heck of a lot easier when it comes to creating the room shapes, especially when they aren't nice rectangles =)

A final little note though. Make sure to read through all of the documentation that Jorg has with his project. I haven't used it in the Python 3.x environment yet, but it was a little painstaking to get it up an running in 2.7.

Just my two cents, enjoy!

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