2,150 research outputs found

    Fast Single Image Super-Resolution Using a New Analytical Solution for l2–l2 Problems

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    International audienceThis paper addresses the problem of single image super-resolution (SR), which consists of recovering a high- resolution image from its blurred, decimated, and noisy version. The existing algorithms for single image SR use different strate- gies to handle the decimation and blurring operators. In addition to the traditional first-order gradient methods, recent techniques investigate splitting-based methods dividing the SR problem into up-sampling and deconvolution steps that can be easily solved. Instead of following this splitting strategy, we propose to deal with the decimation and blurring operators simultaneously by taking advantage of their particular properties in the frequency domain, leading to a new fast SR approach. Specifically, an analytical solution is derived and implemented efficiently for the Gaussian prior or any other regularization that can be formulated into an l2 -regularized quadratic model, i.e., an l2 –l2 optimization problem. The flexibility of the proposed SR scheme is shown through the use of various priors/regularizations, ranging from generic image priors to learning-based approaches. In the case of non-Gaussian priors, we show how the analytical solution derived from the Gaussian case can be embedded into traditional splitting frameworks, allowing the computation cost of existing algorithms to be decreased significantly. Simulation results conducted on several images with different priors illustrate the effectiveness of our fast SR approach compared with existing techniques

    Real-time Ultrasound Signals Processing: Denoising and Super-resolution

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    Ultrasound acquisition is widespread in the biomedical field, due to its properties of low cost, portability, and non-invasiveness for the patient. The processing and analysis of US signals, such as images, 2D videos, and volumetric images, allows the physician to monitor the evolution of the patient's disease, and support diagnosis, and treatments (e.g., surgery). US images are affected by speckle noise, generated by the overlap of US waves. Furthermore, low-resolution images are acquired when a high acquisition frequency is applied to accurately characterise the behaviour of anatomical features that quickly change over time. Denoising and super-resolution of US signals are relevant to improve the visual evaluation of the physician and the performance and accuracy of processing methods, such as segmentation and classification. The main requirements for the processing and analysis of US signals are real-time execution, preservation of anatomical features, and reduction of artefacts. In this context, we present a novel framework for the real-time denoising of US 2D images based on deep learning and high-performance computing, which reduces noise while preserving anatomical features in real-time execution. We extend our framework to the denoise of arbitrary US signals, such as 2D videos and 3D images, and we apply denoising algorithms that account for spatio-temporal signal properties into an image-to-image deep learning model. As a building block of this framework, we propose a novel denoising method belonging to the class of low-rank approximations, which learns and predicts the optimal thresholds of the Singular Value Decomposition. While previous denoise work compromises the computational cost and effectiveness of the method, the proposed framework achieves the results of the best denoising algorithms in terms of noise removal, anatomical feature preservation, and geometric and texture properties conservation, in a real-time execution that respects industrial constraints. The framework reduces the artefacts (e.g., blurring) and preserves the spatio-temporal consistency among frames/slices; also, it is general to the denoising algorithm, anatomical district, and noise intensity. Then, we introduce a novel framework for the real-time reconstruction of the non-acquired scan lines through an interpolating method; a deep learning model improves the results of the interpolation to match the target image (i.e., the high-resolution image). We improve the accuracy of the prediction of the reconstructed lines through the design of the network architecture and the loss function. %The design of the deep learning architecture and the loss function allow the network to improve the accuracy of the prediction of the reconstructed lines. In the context of signal approximation, we introduce our kernel-based sampling method for the reconstruction of 2D and 3D signals defined on regular and irregular grids, with an application to US 2D and 3D images. Our method improves previous work in terms of sampling quality, approximation accuracy, and geometry reconstruction with a slightly higher computational cost. For both denoising and super-resolution, we evaluate the compliance with the real-time requirement of US applications in the medical domain and provide a quantitative evaluation of denoising and super-resolution methods on US and synthetic images. Finally, we discuss the role of denoising and super-resolution as pre-processing steps for segmentation and predictive analysis of breast pathologies

    Development of Some Spatial-domain Preprocessing and Post-processing Algorithms for Better 2-D Up-scaling

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    Image super-resolution is an area of great interest in recent years and is extensively used in applications like video streaming, multimedia, internet technologies, consumer electronics, display and printing industries. Image super-resolution is a process of increasing the resolution of a given image without losing its integrity. Its most common application is to provide better visual effect after resizing a digital image for display or printing. One of the methods of improving the image resolution is through the employment of a 2-D interpolation. An up-scaled image should retain all the image details with very less degree of blurring meant for better visual quality. In literature, many efficient 2-D interpolation schemes are found that well preserve the image details in the up-scaled images; particularly at the regions with edges and fine details. Nevertheless, these existing interpolation schemes too give blurring effect in the up-scaled images due to the high frequency (HF) degradation during the up-sampling process. Hence, there is a scope to further improve their performance through the incorporation of various spatial domain pre-processing, post-processing and composite algorithms. Therefore, it is felt that there is sufficient scope to develop various efficient but simple pre-processing, post-processing and composite schemes to effectively restore the HF contents in the up-scaled images for various online and off-line applications. An efficient and widely used Lanczos-3 interpolation is taken for further performance improvement through the incorporation of various proposed algorithms. The various pre-processing algorithms developed in this thesis are summarized here. The term pre-processing refers to processing the low-resolution input image prior to image up-scaling. The various pre-processing algorithms proposed in this thesis are: Laplacian of Laplacian based global pre-processing (LLGP) scheme; Hybrid global pre-processing (HGP); Iterative Laplacian of Laplacian based global pre-processing (ILLGP); Unsharp masking based pre-processing (UMP); Iterative unsharp masking (IUM); Error based up-sampling(EU) scheme. The proposed algorithms: LLGP, HGP and ILLGP are three spatial domain preprocessing algorithms which are based on 4th, 6th and 8th order derivatives to alleviate nonuniform blurring in up-scaled images. These algorithms are used to obtain the high frequency (HF) extracts from an image by employing higher order derivatives and perform precise sharpening on a low resolution image to alleviate the blurring in its 2-D up-sampled counterpart. In case of unsharp masking based pre-processing (UMP) scheme, the blurred version of a low resolution image is used for HF extraction from the original version through image subtraction. The weighted version of the HF extracts are superimposed with the original image to produce a sharpened image prior to image up-scaling to counter blurring effectively. IUM makes use of many iterations to generate an unsharp mask which contains very high frequency (VHF) components. The VHF extract is the result of signal decomposition in terms of sub-bands using the concept of analysis filter bank. Since the degradation of VHF components is maximum, restoration of such components would produce much better restoration performance. EU is another pre-processing scheme in which the HF degradation due to image upscaling is extracted and is called prediction error. The prediction error contains the lost high frequency components. When this error is superimposed on the low resolution image prior to image up-sampling, blurring is considerably reduced in the up-scaled images. Various post-processing algorithms developed in this thesis are summarized in following. The term post-processing refers to processing the high resolution up-scaled image. The various post-processing algorithms proposed in this thesis are: Local adaptive Laplacian (LAL); Fuzzy weighted Laplacian (FWL); Legendre functional link artificial neural network(LFLANN). LAL is a non-fuzzy, local based scheme. The local regions of an up-scaled image with high variance are sharpened more than the region with moderate or low variance by employing a local adaptive Laplacian kernel. The weights of the LAL kernel are varied as per the normalized local variance so as to provide more degree of HF enhancement to high variance regions than the low variance counterpart to effectively counter the non-uniform blurring. Furthermore, FWL post-processing scheme with a higher degree of non-linearity is proposed to further improve the performance of LAL. FWL, being a fuzzy based mapping scheme, is highly nonlinear to resolve the blurring problem more effectively than LAL which employs a linear mapping. Another LFLANN based post-processing scheme is proposed here to minimize the cost function so as to reduce the blurring in a 2-D up-scaled image. Legendre polynomials are used for functional expansion of the input pattern-vector and provide high degree of nonlinearity. Therefore, the requirement of multiple layers can be replaced by single layer LFLANN architecture so as to reduce the cost function effectively for better restoration performance. With single layer architecture, it has reduced the computational complexity and hence is suitable for various real-time applications. There is a scope of further improvement of the stand-alone pre-processing and postprocessing schemes by combining them through composite schemes. Here, two spatial domain composite schemes, CS-I and CS-II are proposed to tackle non-uniform blurring in an up-scaled image. CS-I is developed by combining global iterative Laplacian (GIL) preprocessing scheme with LAL post-processing scheme. Another highly nonlinear composite scheme, CS-II is proposed which combines ILLGP scheme with a fuzzy weighted Laplacian post-processing scheme for more improved performance than the stand-alone schemes. Finally, it is observed that the proposed algorithms: ILLGP, IUM, FWL, LFLANN and CS-II are better algorithms in their respective categories for effectively reducing blurring in the up-scaled images

    A hybrid camera- and ultrasound-based approach for needle localization and tracking using a 3D motorized curvilinear ultrasound probe

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    Three-dimensional (3D) motorized curvilinear ultrasound probes provide an effective, low-cost tool to guide needle interventions, but localizing and tracking the needle in 3D ultrasound volumes is often challenging. In this study, a new method is introduced to localize and track the needle using 3D motorized curvilinear ultrasound probes. In particular, a low-cost camera mounted on the probe is employed to estimate the needle axis. The camera-estimated axis is used to identify a volume of interest (VOI) in the ultrasound volume that enables high needle visibility. This VOI is analyzed using local phase analysis and the random sample consensus algorithm to refine the camera-estimated needle axis. The needle tip is determined by searching the localized needle axis using a probabilistic approach. Dynamic needle tracking in a sequence of 3D ultrasound volumes is enabled by iteratively applying a Kalman filter to estimate the VOI that includes the needle in the successive ultrasound volume and limiting the localization analysis to this VOI. A series of ex vivo animal experiments are conducted to evaluate the accuracy of needle localization and tracking. The results show that the proposed method can localize the needle in individual ultrasound volumes with maximum error rates of 0.7 mm for the needle axis, 1.7° for the needle angle, and 1.2 mm for the needle tip. Moreover, the proposed method can track the needle in a sequence of ultrasound volumes with maximum error rates of 1.0 mm for the needle axis, 2.0° for the needle angle, and 1.7 mm for the needle tip. These results suggest the feasibility of applying the proposed method to localize and track the needle using 3D motorized curvilinear ultrasound probes

    Machine Learning And Image Processing For Noise Removal And Robust Edge Detection In The Presence Of Mixed Noise

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    The central goal of this dissertation is to design and model a smoothing filter based on the random single and mixed noise distribution that would attenuate the effect of noise while preserving edge details. Only then could robust, integrated and resilient edge detection methods be deployed to overcome the ubiquitous presence of random noise in images. Random noise effects are modeled as those that could emanate from impulse noise, Gaussian noise and speckle noise. In the first step, evaluation of methods is performed based on an exhaustive review on the different types of denoising methods which focus on impulse noise, Gaussian noise and their related denoising filters. These include spatial filters (linear, non-linear and a combination of them), transform domain filters, neural network-based filters, numerical-based filters, fuzzy based filters, morphological filters, statistical filters, and supervised learning-based filters. In the second step, switching adaptive median and fixed weighted mean filter (SAMFWMF) which is a combination of linear and non-linear filters, is introduced in order to detect and remove impulse noise. Then, a robust edge detection method is applied which relies on an integrated process including non-maximum suppression, maximum sequence, thresholding and morphological operations. The results are obtained on MRI and natural images. In the third step, a combination of transform domain-based filter which is a combination of dual tree – complex wavelet transform (DT-CWT) and total variation, is introduced in order to detect and remove Gaussian noise as well as mixed Gaussian and Speckle noise. Then, a robust edge detection is applied in order to track the true edges. The results are obtained on medical ultrasound and natural images. In the fourth step, a smoothing filter, which is a feed-forward convolutional network (CNN) is introduced to assume a deep architecture, and supported through a specific learning algorithm, l2 loss function minimization, a regularization method, and batch normalization all integrated in order to detect and remove impulse noise as well as mixed impulse and Gaussian noise. Then, a robust edge detection is applied in order to track the true edges. The results are obtained on natural images for both specific and non-specific noise-level
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