Joint halftoning and watermarking

  • Authors:
  • D. Kacker;J.P. Allebach

  • Affiliations:
  • Imaging Sci., Shutterfly Inc., Redwood City, CA, USA;-

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing
  • Year:
  • 2003

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Abstract

A framework to jointly halftone and watermark a grayscale images is presented. The framework needs the definition of three components: a human visual system (HVS)-based error metric between the continuous-tone image and a halftone, a watermarking scheme with a corresponding watermark detection measure, and a search strategy to traverse the space of halftones. We employ the HVS-based error metric used in the direct binary search (DBS) halftoning algorithm, and we use a block-based spread spectrum watermarking scheme and the toggle and swap search strategy of DBS. The halftone is printed on a desktop printer and scanned using a flatbed scanner. The watermark is detected from the scanned image and a number of post-processed versions of the scanned image, including one restored in Adobe PhotoShop. The results show that the watermark is extremely resilient to printing, scanning, and post-processing; for a given baseline image quality, joint optimization is better than watermarking and halftoning independently. For this particular algorithm, the original continuous-tone image is required to detect the watermark.