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A missing color area extraction approach from high-resolution statue images for cultural heritage documentation

Engineering and Technology

A missing color area extraction approach from high-resolution statue images for cultural heritage documentation

A. Nasri and X. Huang

Discover an innovative technique called Missing Color Area Extraction (MCAE) that identifies and quantifies color loss in ancient statues using high-resolution images. This method, developed by Adel Nasri and XianFeng Huang, contributes significantly to the documentation and preservation of cultural heritage.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Ancient statues are usually fragile and have a tendency to deteriorate over time, developing cracks, corrosion, and losing color. Before any intervention on the object of art, a conservator must map degradation and take measurements. Deterioration mapping is an extremely long process, as the conservator or restorer must locate and digitize the damages manually and collect physical measurements from the artwork. Extracting and measuring the deterioration automatically from images is less expensive and aids the digital documentation process, thus reducing the time cost of manual deterioration mapping. In this paper, we propose an effective approach named Missing Color Area Extraction in order to extract and measure missing color areas from high-resolution imagery statues, using a thresholding technique. The conversion from RGB color space to HSV color space is applied, in addition to morphological operations to remove the dust and small objects.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Dec 14, 2020
Authors
Adel Nasri, XianFeng Huang
Tags
Missing Color Area Extraction
color loss
ancient statues
cultural heritage
HSV color space
digital preservation
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