A patent application filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on Thursday reveals Apple is continuing to explore light field camera applications, in this case imagining how users would manipulate image data to change focus or depth of field in a photo editing app.
Source: USPTO
Published under the wordy title "Method and UI for Z depth image segmentation," Apple's application covers the software side of light field imaging, describing an application that edits data produced by highly specialized imaging sensors. At its most basic level, the filing imagines steps a user could take to focus, and later refocus, an image captured by a light field camera.
Apple starts off by outlining hardware capable of producing imaging data necessary for advanced refocusing computations. A generic "light field camera" is described as being a camera that not only captures light, but also information about the direction at which light rays enter the system. This rich data set can be used to produce a variety of images, each with a slightly different perspective.
Such specialized imaging sensors do exist in the real world, perhaps most visibly in equipment made by consumer camera maker Lytro. Alternatively, the document could be referring to a plenoptic camera that uses a microlens array to direct light onto a traditional CMOS chip, achieving similar results with less fuss. Apple coincidentally owns IP covering such implementations.
One of the main features of a light field camera is its ability to recalculate depth of field, a term describing a function of aperture size and subject distance that presents itself as a camera system's range of focus.
A large aperture results in a shallow depth of field, meaning only objects that fall within a tight depth range are in focus, while small apertures offer a wider depth of field. In a highly simplified example, objects between two and four feet away from a camera system set to an aperture of f/2 at a specific focusing distance may come out pin-sharp in a photo. Conversely, the same camera system set with an aperture of f/16 or smaller would reproduce objects in sharp focus from two feet to infinity.
In a light field system, data related to light ray direction is processed to determine the depth of an object or objects in frame. Apple's invention uses this depth information to parse an image into layers, which can then be altered or even removed by an editing application.
In one embodiment, Apple's system ingests light field image data, processes it and generates a histogram displaying depth versus number of imaging pixels. Analyzing the histogram, the system can determine peaks and valleys from which image layers are formed.
Each layer corresponds to a certain depth in the light field image. Applying a UI tool, such as a slider bar, users can instruct the system to show foreground layers while obscuring background layers. Manipulating the depth slider causes certain layers to pop into and out of focus.
Alternative methods include selecting an object for focus within an image by clicking or tapping on it directly. With light field data, layers assigned to these objects can be reproduced in various states of focus, or calculated focusing distance, in relation to other layers (foreground and background). In some scenarios, layers can be deleted altogether.
Apple's image editing program also incorporates the usual assortment of photo adjustment settings like contrast, brightness and color correction. Bundled into one app, users can manipulate photo properties alongside depth of field, focus, layer selection and other advanced features specific to light field imaging.
Put into the context of recent events, today's filing is especially interesting. On Tuesday, Apple confirmed -- albeit through usual non-answer comment -- the purchase of Israel-based LinX Computational Imaging Ltd., a firm specializing in "multi-aperture imaging technology." Some estimate the deal to be worth some $20 million.
LinX image sensor.
What Apple plans to do with LinX technology is unclear, but it wouldn't be a stretch to connect the IP with a light field camera system. In the near term, however, Apple is more likely to apply its newly acquired multi-lens camera solutions to capturing traditional photos at high resolutions using small form-factor components.
Apple's light field imaging software patent application was first filed for in October 2013 and credits Andrew E. Bryant and Daniel Pettigrew as its inventors. According to what is believed to be Pettigrew's LinkedIn profile, he has since left his post as Image Processing Specialist at Apple for the same position at Google.