Reducing Affective Responses to Surgical Images through Color Manipulation and Stylization

Abstract
We present the first empirical study on using color manipulation and stylization to make surgery images more palatable. While aversion to such images is natural, it limits many people's ability to satisfy their curiosity, educate themselves, and make informed decisions. We selected a diverse set of image processing techniques, and tested them both on surgeons and lay people. While many artistic methods were found unusable by surgeons, edge-preserving image smoothing gave good results both in terms of preserving information (as judged by surgeons) and reducing repulsiveness (as judged by lay people). Color manipulation turned out to be not as effective.
Description

        
@inproceedings{
10.1145:3229147.3229158
, booktitle = {
Expressive: Computational Aesthetics, Sketch-Based Interfaces and Modeling, Non-Photorealistic Animation and Rendering
}, editor = {
Aydın, Tunç and Sýkora, Daniel
}, title = {{
Reducing Affective Responses to Surgical Images through Color Manipulation and Stylization
}}, author = {
Besançon, Lonni
 and
Semmo, Amir
 and
Biau, David
 and
Frachet, Bruno
 and
Pineau, Virginie
 and
Sariali, El Hadi
 and
Taouachi, Rabah
 and
Isenberg, Tobias
 and
Dragicevic, Pierre
}, year = {
2018
}, publisher = {
ACM
}, ISSN = {
2079-8679
}, ISBN = {
978-1-4503-5892-7
}, DOI = {
10.1145/3229147.3229158
} }
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