1,670 research outputs found
Signal processing algorithms for enhanced image fusion performance and assessment
The dissertation presents several signal processing algorithms for image fusion in noisy multimodal
conditions. It introduces a novel image fusion method which performs well for image
sets heavily corrupted by noise. As opposed to current image fusion schemes, the method has
no requirements for a priori knowledge of the noise component. The image is decomposed with
Chebyshev polynomials (CP) being used as basis functions to perform fusion at feature level. The
properties of CP, namely fast convergence and smooth approximation, renders it ideal for heuristic
and indiscriminate denoising fusion tasks. Quantitative evaluation using objective fusion assessment
methods show favourable performance of the proposed scheme compared to previous efforts
on image fusion, notably in heavily corrupted images.
The approach is further improved by incorporating the advantages of CP with a state-of-the-art
fusion technique named independent component analysis (ICA), for joint-fusion processing
based on region saliency. Whilst CP fusion is robust under severe noise conditions, it is prone to
eliminating high frequency information of the images involved, thereby limiting image sharpness.
Fusion using ICA, on the other hand, performs well in transferring edges and other salient features
of the input images into the composite output. The combination of both methods, coupled with
several mathematical morphological operations in an algorithm fusion framework, is considered a
viable solution. Again, according to the quantitative metrics the results of our proposed approach
are very encouraging as far as joint fusion and denoising are concerned.
Another focus of this dissertation is on a novel metric for image fusion evaluation that is based
on texture. The conservation of background textural details is considered important in many fusion
applications as they help define the image depth and structure, which may prove crucial in
many surveillance and remote sensing applications. Our work aims to evaluate the performance of image fusion algorithms based on their ability to retain textural details from the fusion process.
This is done by utilising the gray-level co-occurrence matrix (GLCM) model to extract second-order
statistical features for the derivation of an image textural measure, which is then used to
replace the edge-based calculations in an objective-based fusion metric. Performance evaluation
on established fusion methods verifies that the proposed metric is viable, especially for multimodal
scenarios
Holistic Processing of Colour Images Using Novel Quaternion-Valued Wavelets on the Plane
We investigate the applicability of quaternion-valued wavelets on the plane
to holistic colour image processing. We present a methodology for decomposing
and reconstructing colour images using quaternionic wavelet filters associated
to recently developed quaternion-valued wavelets on the plane. We consider
compression, enhancement, segmentation, and denoising techniques to demonstrate
quaternion-valued wavelets as a promising tool for holistic colour image
processing
Speckle Noise Reduction using Local Binary Pattern
AbstractA novel local binary pattern (LBP) based adaptive diffusion for speckle noise reduction is presented. The LBP operator unifies traditionally divergent statistical and structural models of region analysis. We use LBP textons to classify an image around a pixel into noisy, homogenous, corner and edge regions. According to different types of regions, a variable weight is assigned in to the diffusion equation, so that our algorithm can adaptively encourage strong diffusion in homogenous/noisy regions and less on the edge/corner regions. The diffusion preserves edges, local details while diffusing more on homogenous region. The experiments results are evaluated both in terms of objective metric and the visual quality
Hyperspectral Image Restoration via Total Variation Regularized Low-rank Tensor Decomposition
Hyperspectral images (HSIs) are often corrupted by a mixture of several types
of noise during the acquisition process, e.g., Gaussian noise, impulse noise,
dead lines, stripes, and many others. Such complex noise could degrade the
quality of the acquired HSIs, limiting the precision of the subsequent
processing. In this paper, we present a novel tensor-based HSI restoration
approach by fully identifying the intrinsic structures of the clean HSI part
and the mixed noise part respectively. Specifically, for the clean HSI part, we
use tensor Tucker decomposition to describe the global correlation among all
bands, and an anisotropic spatial-spectral total variation (SSTV)
regularization to characterize the piecewise smooth structure in both spatial
and spectral domains. For the mixed noise part, we adopt the norm
regularization to detect the sparse noise, including stripes, impulse noise,
and dead pixels. Despite that TV regulariztion has the ability of removing
Gaussian noise, the Frobenius norm term is further used to model heavy Gaussian
noise for some real-world scenarios. Then, we develop an efficient algorithm
for solving the resulting optimization problem by using the augmented Lagrange
multiplier (ALM) method. Finally, extensive experiments on simulated and
real-world noise HSIs are carried out to demonstrate the superiority of the
proposed method over the existing state-of-the-art ones.Comment: 15 pages, 20 figure
Cross-Spectral Full and Partial Face Recognition: Preprocessing, Feature Extraction and Matching
Cross-spectral face recognition remains a challenge in the area of biometrics. The problem arises from some real-world application scenarios such as surveillance at night time or in harsh environments, where traditional face recognition techniques are not suitable or limited due to usage of imagery obtained in the visible light spectrum. This motivates the study conducted in the dissertation which focuses on matching infrared facial images against visible light images. The study outspreads from aspects of face recognition such as preprocessing to feature extraction and to matching.;We address the problem of cross-spectral face recognition by proposing several new operators and algorithms based on advanced concepts such as composite operators, multi-level data fusion, image quality parity, and levels of measurement. To be specific, we experiment and fuse several popular individual operators to construct a higher-performed compound operator named GWLH which exhibits complementary advantages of involved individual operators. We also combine a Gaussian function with LBP, generalized LBP, WLD and/or HOG and modify them into multi-lobe operators with smoothed neighborhood to have a new type of operators named Composite Multi-Lobe Descriptors. We further design a novel operator termed Gabor Multi-Levels of Measurement based on the theory of levels of measurements, which benefits from taking into consideration the complementary edge and feature information at different levels of measurements.;The issue of image quality disparity is also studied in the dissertation due to its common occurrence in cross-spectral face recognition tasks. By bringing the quality of heterogeneous imagery closer to each other, we successfully achieve an improvement in the recognition performance. We further study the problem of cross-spectral recognition using partial face since it is also a common problem in practical usage. We begin with matching heterogeneous periocular regions and generalize the topic by considering all three facial regions defined in both a characteristic way and a mixture way.;In the experiments we employ datasets which include all the sub-bands within the infrared spectrum: near-infrared, short-wave infrared, mid-wave infrared, and long-wave infrared. Different standoff distances varying from short to intermediate and long are considered too. Our methods are compared with other popular or state-of-the-art methods and are proven to be advantageous
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