722 research outputs found
รายงานการวิจัยการวิเคราะห์การลดทอนสัญญาณรบกวนในการถ่ายภาพคลื่นเสียงความถี่สูง
Funded by Suranaree University of Technology budget year 201
Learning a Dilated Residual Network for SAR Image Despeckling
In this paper, to break the limit of the traditional linear models for
synthetic aperture radar (SAR) image despeckling, we propose a novel deep
learning approach by learning a non-linear end-to-end mapping between the noisy
and clean SAR images with a dilated residual network (SAR-DRN). SAR-DRN is
based on dilated convolutions, which can both enlarge the receptive field and
maintain the filter size and layer depth with a lightweight structure. In
addition, skip connections and residual learning strategy are added to the
despeckling model to maintain the image details and reduce the vanishing
gradient problem. Compared with the traditional despeckling methods, the
proposed method shows superior performance over the state-of-the-art methods on
both quantitative and visual assessments, especially for strong speckle noise.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, 7 table
Guided patch-wise nonlocal SAR despeckling
We propose a new method for SAR image despeckling which leverages information
drawn from co-registered optical imagery. Filtering is performed by plain
patch-wise nonlocal means, operating exclusively on SAR data. However, the
filtering weights are computed by taking into account also the optical guide,
which is much cleaner than the SAR data, and hence more discriminative. To
avoid injecting optical-domain information into the filtered image, a
SAR-domain statistical test is preliminarily performed to reject right away any
risky predictor. Experiments on two SAR-optical datasets prove the proposed
method to suppress very effectively the speckle, preserving structural details,
and without introducing visible filtering artifacts. Overall, the proposed
method compares favourably with all state-of-the-art despeckling filters, and
also with our own previous optical-guided filter
Image Restoration for Remote Sensing: Overview and Toolbox
Remote sensing provides valuable information about objects or areas from a
distance in either active (e.g., RADAR and LiDAR) or passive (e.g.,
multispectral and hyperspectral) modes. The quality of data acquired by
remotely sensed imaging sensors (both active and passive) is often degraded by
a variety of noise types and artifacts. Image restoration, which is a vibrant
field of research in the remote sensing community, is the task of recovering
the true unknown image from the degraded observed image. Each imaging sensor
induces unique noise types and artifacts into the observed image. This fact has
led to the expansion of restoration techniques in different paths according to
each sensor type. This review paper brings together the advances of image
restoration techniques with particular focuses on synthetic aperture radar and
hyperspectral images as the most active sub-fields of image restoration in the
remote sensing community. We, therefore, provide a comprehensive,
discipline-specific starting point for researchers at different levels (i.e.,
students, researchers, and senior researchers) willing to investigate the
vibrant topic of data restoration by supplying sufficient detail and
references. Additionally, this review paper accompanies a toolbox to provide a
platform to encourage interested students and researchers in the field to
further explore the restoration techniques and fast-forward the community. The
toolboxes are provided in https://github.com/ImageRestorationToolbox.Comment: This paper is under review in GRS
Hyperbolic Wavelet-Fisz denoising for a model arising in Ultrasound Imaging
International audienceWe present an algorithm and its fully data-driven extension for noise reduction in ultrasound imaging. Our proposed method computes the hyperbolic wavelet transform of the image, before applying a multiscale variance stabilization technique, via a Fisz transformation. This adapts the wavelet coefficients statistics to the wavelet thresholding paradigm. The aim of the hyperbolic setting is to recover the image while respecting the anisotropic nature of structural details. The data-driven extension removes the need for any prior knowledge of the noise model parameters by estimating the noise variance using an isotonic Nadaraya-Watson estimator. Experiments on synthetic and real data, and comparisons with other noise reduction methods demonstrate the potential of our method at recovering ultrasound images while preserving tissue details. Finally, we emphasize the noise model we consider by applying our variance estimation procedure on real images
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