The Kirsch operator or Kirsch compass kernel is a non-linear edge detector that finds the maximum edge strength in a few predetermined directions. It is named after the computer scientist Russell Kirsch.
Mathematical description
The operator takes a single kernel mask and rotates it in 45 degree increments through all 8 compass directions: N, NW, W, SW, S, SE, E, and NE. The edge magnitude of the Kirsch operator is calculated as the maximum magnitude across all directions:
where z enumerates the compass direction kernels g:
- and so on.
The edge direction is defined by the mask that produces the maximum edge magnitude.
Example images
Original
Maximum gradient in the 8 directions
Image filtered with g(1)
Image filtered with g(2)
Image filtered with g(3)
Image filtered with g(4)
Image filtered with g(5)
Image filtered with g(6)
Image filtered with g(7)
Image filtered with g(8)
References
- Kirsch, R. (1971). "Computer determination of the constituent structure of biological images". Computers and Biomedical Research. 4 (3): 315–328. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.161.956. doi:10.1016/0010-4809(71)90034-6.
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