8 research outputs found

    A Detail Based Method for Linear Full Reference Image Quality Prediction

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    In this paper, a novel Full Reference method is proposed for image quality assessment, using the combination of two separate metrics to measure the perceptually distinct impact of detail losses and of spurious details. To this purpose, the gradient of the impaired image is locally decomposed as a predicted version of the original gradient, plus a gradient residual. It is assumed that the detail attenuation identifies the detail loss, whereas the gradient residuals describe the spurious details. It turns out that the perceptual impact of detail losses is roughly linear with the loss of the positional Fisher information, while the perceptual impact of the spurious details is roughly proportional to a logarithmic measure of the signal to residual ratio. The affine combination of these two metrics forms a new index strongly correlated with the empirical Differential Mean Opinion Score (DMOS) for a significant class of image impairments, as verified for three independent popular databases. The method allowed alignment and merging of DMOS data coming from these different databases to a common DMOS scale by affine transformations. Unexpectedly, the DMOS scale setting is possible by the analysis of a single image affected by additive noise.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures. Copyright notice: The paper has been accepted for publication on the IEEE Trans. on Image Processing on 19/09/2017 and the copyright has been transferred to the IEE

    A blind stereoscopic image quality evaluator with segmented stacked autoencoders considering the whole visual perception route

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    Most of the current blind stereoscopic image quality assessment (SIQA) algorithms cannot show reliable accuracy. One reason is that they do not have the deep architectures and the other reason is that they are designed on the relatively weak biological basis, compared with findings on human visual system (HVS). In this paper, we propose a Deep Edge and COlor Signal INtegrity Evaluator (DECOSINE) based on the whole visual perception route from eyes to the frontal lobe, and especially focus on edge and color signal processing in retinal ganglion cells (RGC) and lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). Furthermore, to model the complex and deep structure of the visual cortex, Segmented Stacked Auto-encoder (S-SAE) is used, which has not utilized for SIQA before. The utilization of the S-SAE complements weakness of deep learning-based SIQA metrics that require a very long training time. Experiments are conducted on popular SIQA databases, and the superiority of DECOSINE in terms of prediction accuracy and monotonicity is proved. The experimental results show that our model about the whole visual perception route and utilization of S-SAE are effective for SIQA

    Understanding perceived quality through visual representations

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    The formatting of images can be considered as an optimization problem, whose cost function is a quality assessment algorithm. There is a trade-off between bit budget per pixel and quality. To maximize the quality and minimize the bit budget, we need to measure the perceived quality. In this thesis, we focus on understanding perceived quality through visual representations that are based on visual system characteristics and color perception mechanisms. Specifically, we use the contrast sensitivity mechanisms in retinal ganglion cells and the suppression mechanisms in cortical neurons. We utilize color difference equations and color name distances to mimic pixel-wise color perception and a bio-inspired model to formulate center surround effects. Based on these formulations, we introduce two novel image quality estimators PerSIM and CSV, and a new image quality-assistance method BLeSS. We combine our findings from visual system and color perception with data-driven methods to generate visual representations and measure their quality. The majority of existing data-driven methods require subjective scores or degraded images. In contrast, we follow an unsupervised approach that only utilizes generic images. We introduce a novel unsupervised image quality estimator UNIQUE, and extend it with multiple models and layers to obtain MS-UNIQUE and DMS-UNIQUE. In addition to introducing quality estimators, we analyze the role of spatial pooling and boosting in image quality assessment.Ph.D

    A ParaBoost Method to Image Quality Assessment

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    An ensemble method for full-reference image quality assessment (IQA) based on the parallel boosting (ParaBoost) idea is proposed in this paper. We first extract features from existing image quality metrics and train them to form basic image quality scorers (BIQSs). Then, we select additional features to address specific distortion types and train them to construct auxiliary image quality scorers (AIQSs). Both BIQSs and AIQSs are trained on small image subsets of certain distortion types and, as a result, they are weak performers with respect to a wide variety of distortions. Finally, we adopt the ParaBoost framework, which is a statistical scorer selection scheme for support vector regression (SVR), to fuse the scores of BIQSs and AIQSs to evaluate the images containing a wide range of distortion types. This ParaBoost methodology can be easily extended to images of new distortion types. Extensive experiments are conducted to demonstrate the superior performance of the ParaBoost method, which outperforms existing IQA methods by a significant margin. Specifically, the Spearman rank order correlation coefficients (SROCCs) of the ParaBoost method with respect to the LIVE, CSIQ, TID2008, and TID2013 image quality databases are 0.98, 0.97, 0.98, and 0.96, respectively

    A ParaBoost Method to Image Quality Assessment

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