2,857 research outputs found
Wavelet/shearlet hybridized neural networks for biomedical image restoration
Recently, new programming paradigms have emerged that combine parallelism and numerical computations with algorithmic differentiation. This approach allows for the hybridization of neural network techniques for inverse imaging problems with more traditional methods such as wavelet-based sparsity modelling techniques. The benefits are twofold: on the one hand traditional methods with well-known properties can be integrated in neural networks, either as separate layers or tightly integrated in the network, on the other hand, parameters in traditional methods can be trained end-to-end from datasets in a neural network "fashion" (e.g., using Adagrad or Adam optimizers). In this paper, we explore these hybrid neural networks in the context of shearlet-based regularization for the purpose of biomedical image restoration. Due to the reduced number of parameters, this approach seems a promising strategy especially when dealing with small training data sets
A proximal iteration for deconvolving Poisson noisy images using sparse representations
We propose an image deconvolution algorithm when the data is contaminated by
Poisson noise. The image to restore is assumed to be sparsely represented in a
dictionary of waveforms such as the wavelet or curvelet transforms. Our key
contributions are: First, we handle the Poisson noise properly by using the
Anscombe variance stabilizing transform leading to a {\it non-linear}
degradation equation with additive Gaussian noise. Second, the deconvolution
problem is formulated as the minimization of a convex functional with a
data-fidelity term reflecting the noise properties, and a non-smooth
sparsity-promoting penalties over the image representation coefficients (e.g.
-norm). Third, a fast iterative backward-forward splitting algorithm is
proposed to solve the minimization problem. We derive existence and uniqueness
conditions of the solution, and establish convergence of the iterative
algorithm. Finally, a GCV-based model selection procedure is proposed to
objectively select the regularization parameter. Experimental results are
carried out to show the striking benefits gained from taking into account the
Poisson statistics of the noise. These results also suggest that using
sparse-domain regularization may be tractable in many deconvolution
applications with Poisson noise such as astronomy and microscopy
Wavelets, ridgelets and curvelets on the sphere
We present in this paper new multiscale transforms on the sphere, namely the
isotropic undecimated wavelet transform, the pyramidal wavelet transform, the
ridgelet transform and the curvelet transform. All of these transforms can be
inverted i.e. we can exactly reconstruct the original data from its
coefficients in either representation. Several applications are described. We
show how these transforms can be used in denoising and especially in a Combined
Filtering Method, which uses both the wavelet and the curvelet transforms, thus
benefiting from the advantages of both transforms. An application to component
separation from multichannel data mapped to the sphere is also described in
which we take advantage of moving to a wavelet representation.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. Manuscript with all figures can be
downloaded at http://jstarck.free.fr/aa_sphere05.pd
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