5,913 research outputs found
Locally Non-rigid Registration for Mobile HDR Photography
Image registration for stack-based HDR photography is challenging. If not
properly accounted for, camera motion and scene changes result in artifacts in
the composite image. Unfortunately, existing methods to address this problem
are either accurate, but too slow for mobile devices, or fast, but prone to
failing. We propose a method that fills this void: our approach is extremely
fast---under 700ms on a commercial tablet for a pair of 5MP images---and
prevents the artifacts that arise from insufficient registration quality
Fully-automatic inverse tone mapping algorithm based on dynamic mid-level tone mapping
High Dynamic Range (HDR) displays can show images with higher color contrast levels and peak luminosities than the common Low Dynamic Range (LDR) displays. However, most existing video content is recorded and/or graded in LDR format. To show LDR content on HDR displays, it needs to be up-scaled using a so-called inverse tone mapping algorithm. Several techniques for inverse tone mapping have been proposed in the last years, going from simple approaches based on global and local operators to more advanced algorithms such as neural networks. Some of the drawbacks of existing techniques for inverse tone mapping are the need for human intervention, the high computation time for more advanced algorithms, limited low peak brightness, and the lack of the preservation of the artistic intentions. In this paper, we propose a fully-automatic inverse tone mapping operator based on mid-level mapping capable of real-time video processing. Our proposed algorithm allows expanding LDR images into HDR images with peak brightness over 1000 nits, preserving the artistic intentions inherent to the HDR domain. We assessed our results using the full-reference objective quality metrics HDR-VDP-2.2 and DRIM, and carrying out a subjective pair-wise comparison experiment. We compared our results with those obtained with the most recent methods found in the literature. Experimental results demonstrate that our proposed method outperforms the current state-of-the-art of simple inverse tone mapping methods and its performance is similar to other more complex and time-consuming advanced techniques
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