2,049 research outputs found
Understanding Kernel Size in Blind Deconvolution
Most blind deconvolution methods usually pre-define a large kernel size to
guarantee the support domain. Blur kernel estimation error is likely to be
introduced, yielding severe artifacts in deblurring results. In this paper, we
first theoretically and experimentally analyze the mechanism to estimation
error in oversized kernel, and show that it holds even on blurry images without
noises. Then to suppress this adverse effect, we propose a low rank-based
regularization on blur kernel to exploit the structural information in degraded
kernels, by which larger-kernel effect can be effectively suppressed. And we
propose an efficient optimization algorithm to solve it. Experimental results
on benchmark datasets show that the proposed method is comparable with the
state-of-the-arts by accordingly setting proper kernel size, and performs much
better in handling larger-size kernels quantitatively and qualitatively. The
deblurring results on real-world blurry images further validate the
effectiveness of the proposed method.Comment: Accepted by WACV 201
Learning to Extract a Video Sequence from a Single Motion-Blurred Image
We present a method to extract a video sequence from a single motion-blurred
image. Motion-blurred images are the result of an averaging process, where
instant frames are accumulated over time during the exposure of the sensor.
Unfortunately, reversing this process is nontrivial. Firstly, averaging
destroys the temporal ordering of the frames. Secondly, the recovery of a
single frame is a blind deconvolution task, which is highly ill-posed. We
present a deep learning scheme that gradually reconstructs a temporal ordering
by sequentially extracting pairs of frames. Our main contribution is to
introduce loss functions invariant to the temporal order. This lets a neural
network choose during training what frame to output among the possible
combinations. We also address the ill-posedness of deblurring by designing a
network with a large receptive field and implemented via resampling to achieve
a higher computational efficiency. Our proposed method can successfully
retrieve sharp image sequences from a single motion blurred image and can
generalize well on synthetic and real datasets captured with different cameras
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