Title: Ping Gallivan
1Automated Coin Grader
- Ping Gallivan
- Xiang Gao
- Eric Heinen
- Akarsh Sakalaspur
2Overview
- Introduction
- Technical report
- -histograms
- -edge Detection
- -web Interface
- Conclusion
- Demo
3Long Term Goal of Project
- Develop a system that will be used to grade,
appraise and authenticate valuable collectibles
items such as rare coins providing consistent and
repeatable results.
4The Need for anAutomated Coin Grader
- Unreliable results from manual grading
- Value of the coins
- Grading judgment changes from person to person
- Fakes are plentiful
- Many different denominations of coins
- The rare coin market is dynamic and with
significant changes occurring every week or so
5Goals for our project
- Develop an Automated Coin Grading System
- Web based Coin Grading Quiz
6Tools Used
- Java
- Java Script
- HTML
- C
- Imaging Processing Packages
7Architectural Designof System Overview
Scanner
Image Processor
DB
Extracts features
Scans
Output
System
Display
Grades
8Creating Database
- Obtain a Coin Image (.gif)
- 36 Coins Histograms
- 36 Coin Edge Detection Images
- Distance Measurements
9Image Processing
- Hue the color reflected from or transmitted
through an object. - Saturation Saturation- the strength or purity of
a color - Brightness Brightness- the relative lightness or
darkness of a color
10Image Processing Measure Histogram Obtain
statistical data on the scanned pixels in the
image in terms of the Hue, Saturation
Brightness vectors
11Distance MatrixThe statistical data collected
in step 2 allows us to determine which coins are
similar to others in our database in terms of
known grade.
12Histrogram Analysis
13Coin Grade Processing Results
14Web Based Coin Grading Quiz Site
15Benefits of the Quiz Site
- Educate and attract new collectors with a fun
and interactive web interface - Acclimate the public and the coin grading
industry to the idea of electronic grading
16Image Processing Edge Detection
Edge Detection allows us to look at a coin in a
3D view and pickup additional features.
17Web Site Results Page
18Analysis
- ..nothing can compare to examining a coin in
person. - Four distinct factors
- Surface Preservation
- Strike
- Lustre
- Eye-Appeal
19- Surface Preservation - This includes the presence
of bagmarks, hairlines from cleaning or
mishandling, and other imperfections, whether
mint caused or man made. - Strike - Refers to the sharpness and completeness
of detail, with the normal characteristics of
that particular type, date and mint mark taken
into account. - Lustre - This encompasses the brilliance, sheen
and contrast of the coin, again taking the normal
characteristics of the particular issue into
account - Eye-Appeal - That certain aesthetic appeal that
results from the combination of all of the coin's
qualities.
20- Process
- Single image of the coin under defined lighting
conditions should be captured in digital form
using a high resolution camera. - Various portions of the captured images are to be
computer enhanced to bring out important features
of the coin. - The key regions of the coin need to be examined
in great detail to identify, classify, measure,
and score all flaws. - A light flow and reflectance analysis should be
used to precisely measure the mirror as well as
the inherent lustre of the coin.
21Future Work
- Expand image processing to include advanced
feature recognition beyond HSB and Edge
Detection. - Increase the database to include a larger sample
set and other denominations. - Design an intuitive user interface for scanning
and grading. - Move closer towards automated grading
- Secure funding to cover the costs of equipment
software required
22- Future Work
- Key components of the coin including obverse and
reverse marks, strike, lustre, eye appeal,
mirror, toning, and exceptional conditions need
to be considered to arrive at a set of expert
rules. - Expert Rules Final Grade
23Conclusion
- what does the future have in store for the
grading of coins? - Aid the human graders in making a final
determination of the grade of the coin - Computer grading systems can be highly
consistent, accuracy of about 90 - Image archiving will store one or more images of
the coin for future reference - Reduces turn around time and cost
24Questions???Demonstration