Determine the intensity value, "T", in a 2D image for which 99.9% of all intensity values are less than "T"

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% I can read in an image and calculate a threshold for which the pixels are above some value, i.e., 6000.
Threshold=Q>6000;
% I can count the number of those pixels above that value
PixelCount = sum(Threshold(:))
% ratio the PixelCount over the total # of pixels in an image with dimensions X1, Y1 to determine a fraction, or percent of pixels above that value
Fraction=PixelCount/(X1*Y1)
But if I wish to calculate the intensity value that represents a desired fraction, i.e. 0.001, - instead of choosing an arbitrary number, like 6000........... how do I program to extract the intensity value that represents cutoff for which 99.9% of pixels have a lower intensity ?
I should mention these are uint16 images.
  1 Commento
Ed Principe
Ed Principe il 30 Ott 2020
I think I have something that works for me..... Q is an image from an image stack extracted in a for loop wih index 'p':
Q=l.images1(:,:,p);
SortedQ=sort(Q(:));
figure;plot(SortedQ);
title(['Sorted Pixel Intensities:',F,': image #: ', num2str(p),'/',num2str(l.noimages)],'Interpreter', 'none');
SortedQ(round(0.999*X1*Y1))

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Akira Agata
Akira Agata il 30 Ott 2020
I believe prctile function will be helpful to this task, like:
% Read sample gray scale image
I = imread('cameraman.tif');
% Calculate threshold value (99.9% cut-off)
th = prctile(I(:),99.9);
Check the result:
>> nnz(I<th)/numel(I)
ans =
0.9990
  3 Commenti
Akira Agata
Akira Agata il 30 Ott 2020
OK, then how about the following workaround?
Isort = sort(I(:));
pt = round(numel(x)*0.999);
th = Isort(pt);
If the numel(I) (= total number of pixel) is sufficiently large, the result will be the same.
Ed Principe
Ed Principe il 30 Ott 2020
Yes, that works, that is essentially what I came up with in my comment on the original post above. Thank you very much!!

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