- Daytime Image
- The original image has good contrast and lightning.
- After using the first function the colors of the image were inverted. The used to be white parts of the original image are converted to darker colors and are now easier to identify. Using the first function may be useful to highlight the lighter (or white) details of the original image.
- Using the second function made the original image darker. Details of the image are now harder to observe and identify. I honestly don't see the point of this function.
- The third function made the original image lighter and the contrast of the image is now lower. It now has a "foggier" feel to it.
- Nighttime Image
- The original image is a bit grainy and well, dark. Details of the image are hard to identify. Street lights/lamps are the most obvious parts of the image.
- Since the first function converts the original image to its image negative, the new image now is almost all "white" or light colors since the original image was dark to begin with. Only street lights are identifiable in the new image.
- Using second function made the image almost entirely black. Only the lights are seen in the image (and even these are dim).
- The third function made the image a bit lighter. Still, details of the image are not seen because even if the image is lighter the contrast is very low. Using this function kind of blurred the image.
- High Contrast Image
- The original image has high contrast thus the small details of the image are easily identifiable.
- Even after using the first function and the image is converted to its negative, details are still highly emphasized since the contrast of the original image is high.
- Although the second function made the image darker, the new image is a bit lighter as compared to the outputs from the daytime image and the nighttime image. This maybe the result of having high contrast.
- The third function made the image brighter and it lowered the original image's contrast.
- Low Contrast Image
- The original image has low contrast. Details from afar are not as easily identifiable as compared to the high contrast image.
- The first function actually helps in highlighting details from afar. After being converted to its image negative, small details can now be easily observed.
- Again, the second image only makes the image darker. Details are harder to observe in this image.
- The third function lowers the contrast even more. This blurs the overall already blurry image.
Final Thoughts?
- After using the first function, there's is obviously a notable change since the images are converted to their negatives. Most notable change is on the nighttime image since the entire image is dark thus the image negative resulted into a mostly white image.
- The second function only darkens the images. Again, the nighttime image was the most notable since the entire image turned almost all black after applying the function. I still don't know why we use this function.
- Applying the third function lowers the contrast of the images. This may be good to use for images with contrasts that are too high. For example, after applying this function on the high contrast image the resulting image is now a bit easier on the eyes.
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