A
AiryDiscus
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You say MTF is useless. I say suggest an alternative. You reference JIMD, but not by name.You brought JIMD into discussion. I did not even mention it originally.Ah, so JIMD or whatever. This magic, unpublished noone-is-able-to-see-the-formula metric. Which we should take at face value like DxO?
Well, who else uses it? Anyone to really care about? Government agencies, major companies, etc? Many agencies (e.g. NASA) provide lists of the sorts of things they use, so NDAs would not be an issue en totale.It is not just one person using it. I just provided a link to the comments of one person from years ago. But, apparently you were not satisfied.One person saying it seems to be more sensitive than other options in ImageJ is not a strong sales pitch.
My thoughts on MTF50 are separate to my opinions of Imatest.Who cares about the slanted edge method when it can't let you do things of practical nature that are needed and are important:E.g. the slanted-edge MTF plugin for ImageJ is not very good,
http://forum.luminous-landscape.com/index.php?topic=107311.msg893452#msg893452
BTW, there are several plugins in the general JIMD umbrella. Another, related one, JISR measured sharpness between two images as a ratio:
http://forum.luminous-landscape.com/index.php?topic=60585.msg489070#msg489070
Which has nothing to do with my ImageJ plugin.so MTF from ImageJ is not a good measure of MTF,
I'm not talking about MTF50 here. I know you don't like the author of ImaTest and MTF50. But, he has created a software that a large number of people use for good purpose.and if poor metrics e.g. MTF50 are pulled from the measurement, the sensitivity is even worse.
In one of the threads you link, you berate someone for questioning JIMD, "I find it interesting that you don't know the internals of JIDM but are quick to jump to a conclusion of 'anyone's guess'.", yet you yourself wrote it and refuse to share any of how it works, or even what is involved (Fourier analysis, wavelet decomposition, etc).
So please answer the following:
1. What is JIMD based on? This can be broad and categorical.
2. What is the minimum and maximum value it may take?
3. What difference is significant?
4. Is it linear, logarithimic, power law, or some other scale?
Or, propose as well documented and peer reviewed alternative to MTF, and make a case for its superiority. JIMD fails the underlined criteria. Do not suggest alternatives that fail these criteria.
You continuously call MTF antiquated and not worth looking at - why? Because it can't be applied to natural images? Simply because it's pretty old? Make a case, don't just state as fact that it's old and not worth using.