Haralick Texture
From AWF-Wiki
Image texture is a quantification of the spatial variation of grey tone values. Haralick et al. (1973) suggested the use of grey level co-occurrence matrices (GLCM). This method is based on the joint probability distributions of pairs of pixels. GLCM show how often each gray level occurs at a pixel located at a fixed geometric position relative to each other pixel, as a function of the gray level (Srinivasan and Shobha 2008). An essential component is the definition of eight nearest-neighbor resolution cells (Fig.) that define different matrices for different angles (0°,45°,90°,135°) and distances between the horizontal neighboring pixels.
- In the search engine of the Processing Toolbox, type texture and select HaralickTextureExtraction under Feature Extraction of OTB.
- Under the Parameters tab, select a single band or a multiband file as input layer.
- Select a band number in case of a multiband file under Selected Channel
- Select the size of the neighborhood in x and y direction.
- Specify the range of the grey levels for the specific input band in the Image minimum and Image maximum field. Check [Raster metadata] for correct values!
- Select as number of bins for the histogram: 8.
- Select the Texture Set: Simple
- The result file contains the following texture measures:
- Energy
- Entropy
- Correlation
- Inverse Difference Moment
- Inertia
- Cluster Shade
- Cluster Prominence
- Haralick Correlation