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Please anybody tell me how to remove only the protrusion from this image using just the morphological operations. Also I want to reduce the circle (white color) radius by 5 pixels. I know we can do that by using erosion but what should be the structuring element's(disk type) radius should be and how many iterations should we perform for the selected radius.

I mean can we have structuring element se =strel('disk',5) and perform one iteration or se = strel('disk',1) and perform 5 iterations.

enter image description here

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  • I'd like to note for those who want the hold, there are two good answers, one already accepted Apr 19, 2015 at 7:23
  • I removed the OpenCV tag as your attempts to solve your problem do not use that library.
    – rayryeng
    Apr 21, 2015 at 7:05
  • Ok...but my question is just not limited to Matlab....its open to opencv as well but no body answered...I am working in opencv just for your information..Thanks
    – Navdeep
    Apr 21, 2015 at 9:03

2 Answers 2

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Matlab has a simple function for you to do this. You can use a morphological open operation and morphological erode operation to achieve this. The code can be found below.

I = imread( 'O3Z7j.jpg' );
figure; imshow( I )
D = imopen(I,strel( 'disk', 50 ) );
figure; imshow( D )
E = imerode(D,strel( 'disk', 5 ) );
figure; imshow( E )

Essentially as Wiki describes it, morphological open is the "dilation of the erosion of a set A", where erosion is defined here. To create the structuring element kernel, you can use strel( 'disk', n ) to define a disc of radius n.

The result is shown here.

enter image description here

Here is the image before the erosion.

enter image description here

The before image is shown here.

enter image description here

EDIT: Performance

>> sum( sum( I>128 ) )
ans =
      227675
>> sum( sum( D>128 ) )
ans =
      227173
>> 227675 - 227173
ans =
   502

EDIT 2: Added imerode for new requirement.

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  • Please tell me how many pixels will be removed from the disk i.e white portion using your structuring element of radius 50 in one iteration. Thanks
    – Navdeep
    Apr 18, 2015 at 8:32
  • @Navdeep Added performance, it seems to have removed about 502 px. I don't have the perfect original image, so it's only approximate. Apr 18, 2015 at 8:43
  • Actually I want to remove 5 pixels from the disk I. e I want to reduce the radius of the disk by 5 pixels. How can we do that?
    – Navdeep
    Apr 20, 2015 at 2:20
  • @Navdeep After performing the imopen in my code, you can do an imerode as you originally did. I'll edit your question and my answer accordingly in a bit. Apr 20, 2015 at 20:11
  • @Navdeep Actually can you append that to your question? The "removing 5 pixels from the disk" part Apr 20, 2015 at 20:12
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Assume your image is in a BW array, you can find the center of the main disk with bwdist and then find the pixels that are anormally distributed with respect to the distance to the center.

In practice, this gives:

tol = 25;

% --- Get the center
D = bwdist(1-BW);
[~,I] = max(D(:));
[y, x] = ind2sub(size(BW), I);

% --- Find distances
[Y, X] = find(BW);
J = find(BW);
[d2, K] = sort((X-x).^2 + (Y-y).^2);
z = 1:numel(d2);

f = fit(z', d2, 'poly1');
I = (d2 > z'*f.p1 + f.p2 + tol);

BW(J(K(I))) = 0;

and the result:

enter image description here

You can tune the parameter tol to erode more or less the protrusion, but it should not be below 20 otherwise you with remove pixels of the main disk.

Best,

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  • Personally I prefer my answer instead, it's more elegant, logical, and is probably faster :/ It's also used in industry for image processing and complements erosion/dilation/closing operations that OP described. Apr 18, 2015 at 8:23
  • @krisdestruction I suspect Ratbert took this route because the most standard way was to perform morphological operations and you already provided a viewpoint with your answer. This route is certainly another way to think about it, and I appreciate the effort. It's something I would have never considered. +1.
    – rayryeng
    Apr 19, 2015 at 5:15
  • @rayryeng definitely and I've used this way before too, but there's a lot of hardcoding. I also +1'd it as an alt approach Apr 19, 2015 at 5:17
  • @Ratbert the OP specified a new requirement Apr 20, 2015 at 21:07

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