- Source: Morphological antialiasing
Morphological antialiasing (MLAA) is a technique for minimizing the distortion artifacts known as aliasing when representing a high-resolution image at a lower resolution.
Contrary to multisample anti-aliasing (MSAA), which does not work for deferred rendering, MLAA is a post-process filtering which detects borders in the resulting image and then finds specific patterns in these. Anti-aliasing is achieved by blending pixels in these borders, according to the pattern they belong to and their position within the pattern.
Enhanced subpixel morphological antialiasing, or SMAA, is an image-based GPU-based implementation of MLAA developed by Universidad de Zaragoza and Crytek.
See also
Fast approximate anti-aliasing
Multisample anti-aliasing
Anisotropic filtering
Temporal anti-aliasing
Spatial anti-aliasing
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Morphological antialiasing
- Anti-aliasing
- Multisample anti-aliasing
- Fast approximate anti-aliasing
- Conservative morphological anti-aliasing
- SMAA
- Deferred shading
- Gaussian splatting
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