Exposure fusion


In image processing, computer graphics, and photography, exposure fusion is a technique for blending multiple exposures of the same scene into a single image. As in high dynamic range imaging, the goal is to capture a scene with a higher dynamic range than the camera is capable of capturing with a single exposure.

Technique

By using different exposure parameters on the same scene, a wider dynamic range can be represented and later merged into an image with better dynamic range. After correcting for small shifts that may inadvently happen with hand-held devices, the full-image can be fused in two ways:
The former method assumes a linear response from the camera, which may be provided by DNG or other raw formats. Some variants can take developed images, but the process of reconstructing the intensities is complicated and noisy, compromising the effective dynamic range.
The latter method only cares about aligning features and taking the best parts, automatically or manually, so it is immune to this drawback. However, it cannot be considered a true HDR technique because no HDR image is ever created. The image does look better on displays, but the resulting bit depth of the image is equal to the input depth, unlike on a true HDR image where a greater bit depth allows storing more detailed intensity changes. Flexibility being its strength, this method can be extended to perform focus stacking by using contrast as the sole criteria.

In photomicrography

In photomicrography, the exposure fusion is often the only way how to acquire properly exposed images from stereomicroscopes. One of the software solutions designed for photomicrography is the . This module can be also combined with focus stacking module to solve another problem, which is shallow depth of field of stereomicroscopes.

Software