Aller au contenu principal

Stairstep interpolation


Stairstep interpolation


In image processing, stairstep interpolation is a general method for interpolating the pixels after enlarging an image. The key idea is to interpolate multiple times in small increments using any interpolation algorithm that is better than nearest-neighbor interpolation, such as bilinear interpolation, and bicubic interpolation. A common scenario is to interpolate an image by using a bicubic interpolation which increases the image size by no more than 10% (110% of the original size) at a time until the desired size is reached.

The method was popularized in part by developer Fred Miranda, who created several Photoshop plug-ins incorporating the technique.

Example

See also

  • Anti-aliasing
  • Bézier surface
  • Cubic Hermite spline, the one-dimensional analogue of bicubic spline
  • Lanczos resampling
  • Sinc filter
  • Spline interpolation

References

External links

  • Photoshop plugin to achieve stairstep interpolation


Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Stairstep interpolation by Wikipedia (Historical)



PEUGEOT 205