Steganographic calibration signals (sometimes termed "orientation
signals," "marker signals," reference signals," "grid signals," etc.) are sometimes
included with digital watermarking signals so that subsequent distortion of the
object thereby marked (e.g., a digital image file, audio clip, document, etc.)
can later be discerned and compensated-for. Digital watermark detection systems
sometimes fail if the object encompasses several separately-watermarked components
(e.g., a scanned magazine page with several different images, or photocopy data
resulting from scanning while several documents are on the photocopier platen).
Each component may include its own calibration signal, confusing the detection
system. In accordance with certain embodiments, this problem is addressed by a
proximity-based approach, and/or a multiple grid-based approach. In accordance
with other embodiments, the calibration signal can—itself—convey watermark
information, so it serves both a calibration and a payload-conveyance function.