I want to ask about MultiScale Object Detection. For the multiscale, if we have an original image do I need to zoom-in at different scales in the image at a particular point or zoom-out at different scales in the image at a particular point?
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Multiscale object detection generally consists in smoothing the image with larger and larger kernels, to check which objects persist across different scales. So, zoom-out, mostly. You now can have access to the scale-space representation of the image, as shown below.
One reason is that, without more knowledge, one does not zoom in beyond the pixel width. As illustrated (with humour) in the following picture.
Meanwhile, in certain conditions, subpixel resolution or superresolution is possible.
Laurent Duval
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imresizeanddownsampleprovide instanced in the large class of scale-space/multiscale techniques. Using the low-pass effect of larger kernels, you can indeed downsample the low-pass images, and obtain something akin to the Gaussian pyramid. YOu can find a description of the above in the survey paper A Panorama on Multiscale Geometric Representations – Laurent Duval Nov 18 '16 at 12:45