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Converting 32 bit to uint16

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Tevin
Tevin le 11 Avr 2024
Commenté : DGM le 2 Mai 2024
I want to convert 32bit image to uint16 image but preserve the grey values. I do not want to lose the grey value, rather scale them to the uint16. How can I do this. My code below makes the images fully grey.
% Normalize the pixel values to the range [0, 1]
img_normalized = double(img_original) / double(max(img_original(:)));
% Find the minimum and maximum values in the normalized image
min_val = min(img_normalized(:));
max_val = max(img_normalized(:));
% Define the minimum and maximum values for uint16
min_uint16 = double(intmin('uint16'));
max_uint16 = double(intmax('uint16'));
% Calculate the scaling factors
scale_factor = (max_uint16 - min_uint16) / (max_val - min_val);
% Scale the pixel values to uint16 range
img_scaled = uint16((img_normalized - min_val) * scale_factor + min_uint16);

Réponses (2)

Abhishek Chakram
Abhishek Chakram le 2 Mai 2024
Hi Tevin,
To convert a 32-bit image to a uint16 image while preserving the grayscale values, you need to scale the pixel values appropriately. The goal is to map these values to the 0-65535 range, since uint16 can represent values in this range. Here is a sample code to do that:
% Read a 32-bit image. Replace 'your_image_path.png' with the actual path to your image.
% This assumes the image is stored in a format that supports 32-bit data (e.g., PNG, TIFF).
img32 = imread('your_image_path.png');
% Convert the image to double precision for processing, assuming it's not already
img32Double = double(img32);
% If your image is in a floating-point format with values ranging from 0 to 1,
% you can skip this step. If it's a 32-bit integer format, you should scale it to [0, 1]:
% img32Double = img32Double / double(intmax('uint32'));
% Scale the values from the [0, 1] range to [0, 65535] range for uint16
% Adjust this line if your original image uses a different scale
img16 = uint16(img32Double * 65535);
% Save the 16-bit image. Choose an appropriate format that supports 16-bit data.
imwrite(img16, 'your_output_image_path.tif');
You can refer to the following documentation to know more about functions used:
Best Regards,
Abhishek Chakram
  1 commentaire
DGM
DGM le 2 Mai 2024
I don't know why you're commenting out the scaling operation, since it's the actual part that's required. Otherwise, this just results in a grossly truncated (i.e. completely destroyed) image.

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DGM
DGM le 2 Mai 2024
MIMT imcast() supports int32 and uint32 images, and will perform the appropriate scaling and casting in one go.
% uint32 RGB image
inpict = imread('peppers_uint32.tiff');
% convert to uint16
outpict = imcast(inpict,'uint16');
This behaves as does im2uint8(), im2uint16(), etc. Black and white are the reference points used for the scaling, not the image extrema, so the relative gray levels don't change.

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