Quote: Original post by TimkinIt would be helpful if you would suggest some books/other resources on the subject. I've found that in subjects that are highly technical (such as wavelets are and wavelet analysis probably is) there is more misinformation on the internet than information, and the information is terse and presumes the reader knows much more math than they do (or at least than I do). Quality books usually don't make as many basic mistakes.
Rofl... everything described here (transforms, filtering, gradient based analysis) is all covered by doing a wavelet analysis of the image. If you're going to do something, don't 'hack it', do it properly. Yes, there are other methods out there that are useful... but they're generally not as robust as this single method.
As far as which filter to apply, an anisotophic diffusion of the kind that photoshop provides usually brings out shapes very well. I have no idea how it works, though