14,988 research outputs found

    An Adaptive Weighted Average (WAV) Reprojection Algorithm for Image Denoising

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    Patch-based denoising algorithms have an effective improvement in the image denoising domain. The Non-Local Means (NLM) algorithm is the most popular patch-based spatial domain denoising algorithm. Many variants of the NLM algorithm have proposed to improve its performance. Weighted Average (WAV) reprojection algorithm is one of the most effective improvements of the NLM denoising algorithm. Contrary to the NLM algorithm, all the pixels in the patch contribute into the averaging process in the WAV reprojection algorithm, which enhances the denoising performance. The key parameters in the WAV reprojection algorithm are kept fixed regardless of the image structure. In this thesis, an improved WAV reprojection algorithm is proposed, where the patch size is assigned adaptively based on the image structure. The image structure is identified using an improved classification method that is based on the structure tensor matrix. The classification result is also utilized to improve the identification of similar patches in the image. The experimental results show that the denoising performance of the proposed method is better than that of the original WAV reprojection algorithm, as well as some other variants of the NLM algorithm

    Patch-based Denoising Algorithms for Single and Multi-view Images

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    In general, all single and multi-view digital images are captured using sensors, where they are often contaminated with noise, which is an undesired random signal. Such noise can also be produced during transmission or by lossy image compression. Reducing the noise and enhancing those images is among the fundamental digital image processing tasks. Improving the performance of image denoising methods, would greatly contribute to single or multi-view image processing techniques, e.g. segmentation, computing disparity maps, etc. Patch-based denoising methods have recently emerged as the state-of-the-art denoising approaches for various additive noise levels. This thesis proposes two patch-based denoising methods for single and multi-view images, respectively. A modification to the block matching 3D algorithm is proposed for single image denoising. An adaptive collaborative thresholding filter is proposed which consists of a classification map and a set of various thresholding levels and operators. These are exploited when the collaborative hard-thresholding step is applied. Moreover, the collaborative Wiener filtering is improved by assigning greater weight when dealing with similar patches. For the denoising of multi-view images, this thesis proposes algorithms that takes a pair of noisy images captured from two different directions at the same time (stereoscopic images). The structural, maximum difference or the singular value decomposition-based similarity metrics is utilized for identifying locations of similar search windows in the input images. The non-local means algorithm is adapted for filtering these noisy multi-view images. The performance of both methods have been evaluated both quantitatively and qualitatively through a number of experiments using the peak signal-to-noise ratio and the mean structural similarity measure. Experimental results show that the proposed algorithm for single image denoising outperforms the original block matching 3D algorithm at various noise levels. Moreover, the proposed algorithm for multi-view image denoising can effectively reduce noise and assist to estimate more accurate disparity maps at various noise levels

    Sparsity Based Poisson Denoising with Dictionary Learning

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    The problem of Poisson denoising appears in various imaging applications, such as low-light photography, medical imaging and microscopy. In cases of high SNR, several transformations exist so as to convert the Poisson noise into an additive i.i.d. Gaussian noise, for which many effective algorithms are available. However, in a low SNR regime, these transformations are significantly less accurate, and a strategy that relies directly on the true noise statistics is required. A recent work by Salmon et al. took this route, proposing a patch-based exponential image representation model based on GMM (Gaussian mixture model), leading to state-of-the-art results. In this paper, we propose to harness sparse-representation modeling to the image patches, adopting the same exponential idea. Our scheme uses a greedy pursuit with boot-strapping based stopping condition and dictionary learning within the denoising process. The reconstruction performance of the proposed scheme is competitive with leading methods in high SNR, and achieving state-of-the-art results in cases of low SNR.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
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