Abstract
Multilevel threshold image segmentation is a key task in image processing, yet it faces challenges such as low search efficiency in high-dimensional spaces, difficulty in balancing segmentation accuracy and stability, and insufficient adaptability to complex scenes. Existing solutions mainly include traditional thresholding methods and metaheuristic optimization-based schemes, but they still face limitations in high-dimensional and complex segmentation tasks. The standard Seagull Optimization Algorithm (SOA) suffers from shortcomings including a single exploration mechanism, weak local exploitation capability, and a tendency for population diversity to deteriorate, making it difficult to meet the demands of high-dimensional optimization. To address these issues, this paper proposes a multi-strategy fused improved Seagull Optimization Algorithm (MFISOA), which integrates three strategies: adaptive cooperative foraging, differential evolution-driven exploitation, and centroid opposition-based boundary control. These strategies jointly construct a collaborative optimization framework with dynamic resource allocation, fine local search, and population diversity maintenance, thereby improving global exploration efficiency, local exploitation accuracy, and population stability. To evaluate the optimization performance of MFISOA, numerical simulation experiments were conducted on the CEC2017 and CEC2022 benchmark test suites, and comparisons were made with nine other mainstream advanced algorithms. The results show that MFISOA outperforms the competing algorithms in terms of optimization accuracy, convergence speed, and operational stability. Its superiority is further verified by the Wilcoxon rank-sum test and the Friedman test, with statistical significance (p < 0.05). In the multilevel threshold image segmentation task, using the Otsu criterion as the objective function, MFISOA was tested on nine benchmark images under 4-, 6-, 8-, and 10-threshold segmentation scenarios. The results indicate that MFISOA achieves better performance on metrics such as Structural Similarity Index (SSIM), Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR), and Feature Similarity Index (FSIM), enabling more accurate characterization of image grayscale distribution features and producing higher-quality segmentation results. This study provides an efficient and reliable approach for numerical optimization and multilevel threshold image segmentation.