Impulse Noise Reduction: Difference between revisions

From RawPedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
mNo edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<div class="pagetitle">Impulse Noise Reduction</div>
{{1:1}}
{{1:1}}


Suppresses 'salt and pepper' noise - usually white single-pixel noise, similar (but not occurring for the same reason as) hot or dead pixels. The slider adjusts the threshold that must be exceeded for the suppression to be applied.
Suppresses salt-and-pepper noise - sudden white and black pixels, which remind one of salt and pepper sprinkled over a photo. This is done after demosaicing.
 
Whereas salt-and-pepper noise is typically just white or black, hot pixels can be of a pure, saturated color, while dead pixels are black. Hot and dead pixels occur for a very different reason than salt-and-pepper noise and should be handled using the [[Preprocessing#Hot.2FDead_Pixel_Filter|Hot/Dead Pixel Filter]], which works before demosaicing.
 
The slider adjusts the threshold which must be exceeded for the suppression to be applied.

Latest revision as of 21:42, 9 December 2019

Impulse Noise Reduction

The effects of this tool are only visible at a preview scale of 1:1 or more. Use a detail window (click on the Window-add.png icon under the main preview panel) to inspect a part of the image, or zoom the main preview to 100% (also called 1:1) Magnifier-1to1.png.


Suppresses salt-and-pepper noise - sudden white and black pixels, which remind one of salt and pepper sprinkled over a photo. This is done after demosaicing.

Whereas salt-and-pepper noise is typically just white or black, hot pixels can be of a pure, saturated color, while dead pixels are black. Hot and dead pixels occur for a very different reason than salt-and-pepper noise and should be handled using the Hot/Dead Pixel Filter, which works before demosaicing.

The slider adjusts the threshold which must be exceeded for the suppression to be applied.