Visual hyperacuity: representation and computation of high precision position information
Computer Vision, Graphics, and Image Processing - Lectures notes in computer science, Vol. 201 (G. Goos and J. Hartmanis, Eds.)
Algorithms for subpixel registration
Computer Vision, Graphics, and Image Processing
Filtering high quality text for display on raster scan devices
SIGGRAPH '81 Proceedings of the 8th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
The use of grayscale for improved raster display of vectors and characters
SIGGRAPH '78 Proceedings of the 5th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Human vision, anti-aliasing, and the cheap 4000 line display
SIGGRAPH '80 Proceedings of the 7th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques
Jagged edges: when is filtering needed?
ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG)
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The assumption that antialiasing destroys useful visual information about object features is challenged in three experiments that examine the effects of antialiasing on the visual information for object location and motion. The results show that proper antialiasing eliminates the spurious visual information produced by sampling processes in image synthesis and allows the viewer's visual system to produce a precise representation of object location and a continuous representation of object motion. This suggests that in designing imagery systems, simply increasing the spatial and temporal addressability and resolution beyond limits set by the human visual system will have a negligible impact on image quality, but that effective use of antialiasing techniques could allow visual information about object features to be presented with great fidelity.