Scientific Reports (Sep 2024)
A two-stage defect detection method for unevenly illuminated self-adhesive printed materials
Abstract
Abstract The process of printing defect detection usually suffers from challenges such as inaccurate defect extraction and localization, caused by uneven illumination and complex textures. Moreover, image difference-based defect detection methods often result in numerous small-scale pseudo defects. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a comprehensive defect detection approach that integrates brightness correction and a two-stage defect detection strategy for self-adhesive printed materials. Concretely, a joint bilateral filter coupled with brightness correction corrects uneven brightness properly, meanwhile smoothing the grid-like texture in complex printed material images. Then, in the first detection stage, an image difference method based on a bright–dark difference template group is designed to effectively locate printing defects despite slight brightness fluctuations. Afterward, a discriminative method based on feature similarity is employed to filter out small-scale pseudo-defects in the second detection stage. The experimental results show that the improved difference method achieves an average precision of 99.1% in defect localization on five different printing pattern samples. Furthermore, the second stage reduces the false detection rate to under 0.5% while maintaining the low missed rate.
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