Gilles <
nos...@nospam.com> à ploppé:
I believe ImageJ could be made to do that; it's written in Java so
it should run on anything that can run Java. Depending on the size
of the images, it could be too heavy to run on a handheld, but these
tiny things tend to have impressive specs these days.
It's a bit of a niche application, you're right.
It's available absolutely free of charge at
http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/
They have a lot of plugin for specific applications, too.
The width, length and area are going to be no problem at all if you
have an object of known size on each image to calibrate the
measurement.
Not sure how you intend to calculate the depth unless you have 3-D
images. If you have then it's a doodle; otherwise you'll have to make
with an area measurement and/or colour analysis. There is no easy way
to reliably calculate the depth from a 2-D image.
(unless you have 2 objects of known size, one at the lip and one at the
deepest point of the wound, then it's simple perspective calculation,
but that implies shoving some stuff into the wound, not sure it's good;
and it's going to be very imprecise unless the wound is much deeper than
the size of the reference objects).
--
PiLS