Scanning bi-tonal images – Kodak i55 User Manual
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A-61527 May 2006
Scanning bi-tonal images
Bi-tonal images are scanned images that are made up of only black-
and-white elements. The descriptions below are for bi-tonal images 
only.
Binarization is the process of converting a grayscale or color image to 
a bi-tonal image. There are several different methods of performing this 
conversion. Two of the options Kodak provides are iThresholding and 
Adaptive Threshold Processing.
These options are applied to grayscale scanned images and output a 
bi-tonal electronic image. Thresholding and Adaptive Threshold 
Processing separate the foreground information from the background 
information even when the background color or shading varies, and the 
foreground information varies in color quality and darkness. Different 
types of documents may be scanned using the same image processing 
parameters and still result in excellent scanned images.
• iThresholding: selecting iThresholding allows the scanner to
dynamically evaluate each document to determine the optimal 
threshold value to produce the highest quality image. This allows 
scanning of mixed document sets with varying quality (i.e., faint text, 
shaded backgrounds, color backgrounds) to be scanned using a 
single setting thus reducing the need for document sorting.
When using iThresholding, only Contrast may be adjusted.
• Adaptive Thresholding (ATP): the Adaptive Threshold Processor
separates the foreground information in an image (i.e., text, graphics, 
lines, etc.) from the background information (i.e., white or non-white 
paper background).
When using Adaptive Thresholding, Threshold and Contrast may be
adjusted.