1,112 research outputs found

    Evaluation of the color image and video processing chain and visual quality management for consumer systems

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    With the advent of novel digital display technologies, color processing is increasingly becoming a key aspect in consumer video applications. Today’s state-of-the-art displays require sophisticated color and image reproduction techniques in order to achieve larger screen size, higher luminance and higher resolution than ever before. However, from color science perspective, there are clearly opportunities for improvement in the color reproduction capabilities of various emerging and conventional display technologies. This research seeks to identify potential areas for improvement in color processing in a video processing chain. As part of this research, various processes involved in a typical video processing chain in consumer video applications were reviewed. Several published color and contrast enhancement algorithms were evaluated, and a novel algorithm was developed to enhance color and contrast in images and videos in an effective and coordinated manner. Further, a psychophysical technique was developed and implemented for performing visual evaluation of color image and consumer video quality. Based on the performance analysis and visual experiments involving various algorithms, guidelines were proposed for the development of an effective color and contrast enhancement method for images and video applications. It is hoped that the knowledge gained from this research will help build a better understanding of color processing and color quality management methods in consumer video

    Adaptive filtering techniques for acquisition noise and coding artifacts of digital pictures

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    The quality of digital pictures is often degraded by various processes (e.g, acquisition or capturing, compression, filtering process, transmission, etc). In digital image/video processing systems, random noise appearing in images is mainly generated during the capturing process; while the artifacts (or distortions) are generated in compression or filtering processes. This dissertation looks at digital image/video quality degradations with possible solution for post processing techniques for coding artifacts and acquisition noise reduction for images/videos. Three major issues associated with the image/video degradation are addressed in this work. The first issue is the temporal fluctuation artifact in digitally compressed videos. In the state-of-art video coding standard, H.264/AVC, temporal fluctuations are noticeable between intra picture frames or between an intra picture frame and neighbouring inter picture frames. To resolve this problem, a novel robust statistical temporal filtering technique is proposed. It utilises a re-descending robust statistical model with outlier rejection feature to reduce the temporal fluctuations while preserving picture details and motion sharpness. PSNR and sum of square difference (SSD) show improvement of proposed filters over other benchmark filters. Even for videos contain high motion, the proposed temporal filter shows good performances in fluctuation reduction and motion clarity preservation compared with other baseline temporal filters. The second issue concerns both the spatial and temporal artifacts (e.g, blocking, ringing, and temporal fluctuation artifacts) appearing in compressed video. To address this issue, a novel joint spatial and temporal filtering framework is constructed for artifacts reduction. Both the spatial and the temporal filters employ a re-descending robust statistical model (RRSM) in the filtering processes. The robust statistical spatial filter (RSSF) reduces spatial blocking and ringing artifacts whilst the robust statistical temporal filter (RSTF) suppresses the temporal fluctuations. Performance evaluations demonstrate that the proposed joint spatio-temporal filter is superior to H.264 loop filter in terms of spatial and temporal artifacts reduction and motion clarity preservation. The third issue is random noise, commonly modeled as mixed Gaussian and impulse noise (MGIN), which appears in image/video acquisition process. An effective method to estimate MGIN is through a robust estimator, median absolute deviation normalized (MADN). The MADN estimator is used to separate the MGIN model into impulse and additive Gaussian noise portion. Based on this estimation, the proposed filtering process is composed of a modified median filter for impulse noise reduction, and a DCT transform based denoising filter for additive Gaussian noise reduction. However, this DCT based denoising filter produces temporal fluctuations for videos. To solve this problem, a temporal filter is added to the filtering process. Therefore, another joint spatio-temporal filtering scheme is built to achieve the best visual quality of denoised videos. Extensive experiments show that the proposed joint spatio-temporal filtering scheme outperforms other benchmark filters in noise and distortions suppression

    Critical Data Compression

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    A new approach to data compression is developed and applied to multimedia content. This method separates messages into components suitable for both lossless coding and 'lossy' or statistical coding techniques, compressing complex objects by separately encoding signals and noise. This is demonstrated by compressing the most significant bits of data exactly, since they are typically redundant and compressible, and either fitting a maximally likely noise function to the residual bits or compressing them using lossy methods. Upon decompression, the significant bits are decoded and added to a noise function, whether sampled from a noise model or decompressed from a lossy code. This results in compressed data similar to the original. For many test images, a two-part image code using JPEG2000 for lossy coding and PAQ8l for lossless coding produces less mean-squared error than an equal length of JPEG2000. Computer-generated images typically compress better using this method than through direct lossy coding, as do many black and white photographs and most color photographs at sufficiently high quality levels. Examples applying the method to audio and video coding are also demonstrated. Since two-part codes are efficient for both periodic and chaotic data, concatenations of roughly similar objects may be encoded efficiently, which leads to improved inference. Applications to artificial intelligence are demonstrated, showing that signals using an economical lossless code have a critical level of redundancy which leads to better description-based inference than signals which encode either insufficient data or too much detail.Comment: 99 pages, 31 figure

    Combined Industry, Space and Earth Science Data Compression Workshop

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    The sixth annual Space and Earth Science Data Compression Workshop and the third annual Data Compression Industry Workshop were held as a single combined workshop. The workshop was held April 4, 1996 in Snowbird, Utah in conjunction with the 1996 IEEE Data Compression Conference, which was held at the same location March 31 - April 3, 1996. The Space and Earth Science Data Compression sessions seek to explore opportunities for data compression to enhance the collection, analysis, and retrieval of space and earth science data. Of particular interest is data compression research that is integrated into, or has the potential to be integrated into, a particular space or earth science data information system. Preference is given to data compression research that takes into account the scien- tist's data requirements, and the constraints imposed by the data collection, transmission, distribution and archival systems

    On Versatile Video Coding at UHD with Machine-Learning-Based Super-Resolution

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    Coding 4K data has become of vital interest in recent years, since the amount of 4K data is significantly increasing. We propose a coding chain with spatial down- and upscaling that combines the next-generation VVC codec with machine learning based single image super-resolution algorithms for 4K. The investigated coding chain, which spatially downscales the 4K data before coding, shows superior quality than the conventional VVC reference software for low bitrate scenarios. Throughout several tests, we find that up to 12 % and 18 % Bjontegaard delta rate gains can be achieved on average when coding 4K sequences with VVC and QP values above 34 and 42, respectively. Additionally, the investigated scenario with up- and downscaling helps to reduce the loss of details and compression artifacts, as it is shown in a visual example.Comment: Originally published as conference paper at QoMEX 202

    A Detail Based Method for Linear Full Reference Image Quality Prediction

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    In this paper, a novel Full Reference method is proposed for image quality assessment, using the combination of two separate metrics to measure the perceptually distinct impact of detail losses and of spurious details. To this purpose, the gradient of the impaired image is locally decomposed as a predicted version of the original gradient, plus a gradient residual. It is assumed that the detail attenuation identifies the detail loss, whereas the gradient residuals describe the spurious details. It turns out that the perceptual impact of detail losses is roughly linear with the loss of the positional Fisher information, while the perceptual impact of the spurious details is roughly proportional to a logarithmic measure of the signal to residual ratio. The affine combination of these two metrics forms a new index strongly correlated with the empirical Differential Mean Opinion Score (DMOS) for a significant class of image impairments, as verified for three independent popular databases. The method allowed alignment and merging of DMOS data coming from these different databases to a common DMOS scale by affine transformations. Unexpectedly, the DMOS scale setting is possible by the analysis of a single image affected by additive noise.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures. Copyright notice: The paper has been accepted for publication on the IEEE Trans. on Image Processing on 19/09/2017 and the copyright has been transferred to the IEE

    Learning-based Wavelet-like Transforms For Fully Scalable and Accessible Image Compression

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    The goal of this thesis is to improve the existing wavelet transform with the aid of machine learning techniques, so as to enhance coding efficiency of wavelet-based image compression frameworks, such as JPEG 2000. In this thesis, we first propose to augment the conventional base wavelet transform with two additional learned lifting steps -- a high-to-low step followed by a low-to-high step. The high-to-low step suppresses aliasing in the low-pass band by using the detail bands at the same resolution, while the low-to-high step aims to further remove redundancy from detail bands by using the corresponding low-pass band. These two additional steps reduce redundancy (notably aliasing information) amongst the wavelet subbands, and also improve the visual quality of reconstructed images at reduced resolutions. To train these two networks in an end-to-end fashion, we develop a backward annealing approach to overcome the non-differentiability of the quantization and cost functions during back-propagation. Importantly, the two additional networks share a common architecture, named a proposal-opacity topology, which is inspired and guided by a specific theoretical argument related to geometric flow. This particular network topology is compact and with limited non-linearities, allowing a fully scalable system; one pair of trained network parameters are applied for all levels of decomposition and for all bit-rates of interest. By employing the additional lifting networks within the JPEG2000 image coding standard, we can achieve up to 17.4% average BD bit-rate saving over a wide range of bit-rates, while retaining the quality and resolution scalability features of JPEG2000. Built upon the success of the high-to-low and low-to-high steps, we then study more broadly the extension of neural networks to all lifting steps that correspond to the base wavelet transform. The purpose of this comprehensive study is to understand what is the most effective way to develop learned wavelet-like transforms for highly scalable and accessible image compression. Specifically, we examine the impact of the number of learned lifting steps, the number of layers and the number of channels in each learned lifting network, and kernel support in each layer. To facilitate the study, we develop a generic training methodology that is simultaneously appropriate to all lifting structures considered. Experimental results ultimately suggest that to improve the existing wavelet transform, it is more profitable to augment a larger wavelet transform with more diverse high-to-low and low-to-high steps, rather than developing deep fully learned lifting structures

    Edge-enhancing image smoothing.

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    Xu, Yi.Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011.Includes bibliographical references (p. 62-69).Abstracts in English and Chinese.Chapter 1 --- Introduction --- p.1Chapter 1.1 --- Organization --- p.4Chapter 2 --- Background and Motivation --- p.7Chapter 2.1 --- ID Mondrian Smoothing --- p.9Chapter 2.2 --- 2D Formulation --- p.13Chapter 3 --- Solver --- p.16Chapter 3.1 --- More Analysis --- p.20Chapter 4 --- Edge Extraction --- p.26Chapter 4.1 --- Related work --- p.26Chapter 4.2 --- Method and Results --- p.28Chapter 4.3 --- Summary --- p.32Chapter 5 --- Image Abstraction and Pencil Sketching --- p.35Chapter 5.1 --- Related Work --- p.35Chapter 5.2 --- Method and Results --- p.36Chapter 5.3 --- Summary --- p.40Chapter 6 --- Clip-Art Compression Artifact Removal --- p.41Chapter 6.1 --- Related work --- p.41Chapter 6.2 --- Method and Results --- p.43Chapter 6.3 --- Summary --- p.46Chapter 7 --- Layer-Based Contrast Manipulation --- p.49Chapter 7.1 --- Related Work --- p.49Chapter 7.2 --- Method and Results --- p.50Chapter 7.2.1 --- Edge Adjustment --- p.51Chapter 7.2.2 --- Detail Magnification --- p.54Chapter 7.2.3 --- Tone Mapping --- p.55Chapter 7.3 --- Summary --- p.56Chapter 8 --- Conclusion and Discussion --- p.59Bibliography --- p.6
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