Information Density And Efficiency Of Two-Dimensional (2-D) Sampled Imagery

Information density and efficiency (i.e., the ratio of information density to data density) are used as criteria for assessing the quality of 2-D sampled and quantized imagery as a function of the statistical properties of random radiance fields, the spatial response (PSF or MTF) and sensitivity of imaging systems, and the sampling and quantization intervals. Computational results are intuitively satisfying: they are consistent with experimental and theoretical results obtained by earlier investigators concerned with the performance of TV cameras, and they provide useful guidelines for optimizing the design of line-scan and sensor-array imaging systems, especially if these systems use a digital communication link for transmitting data.