5,208 research outputs found

    Wavelet-Based Enhancement Technique for Visibility Improvement of Digital Images

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    Image enhancement techniques for visibility improvement of color digital images based on wavelet transform domain are investigated in this dissertation research. In this research, a novel, fast and robust wavelet-based dynamic range compression and local contrast enhancement (WDRC) algorithm to improve the visibility of digital images captured under non-uniform lighting conditions has been developed. A wavelet transform is mainly used for dimensionality reduction such that a dynamic range compression with local contrast enhancement algorithm is applied only to the approximation coefficients which are obtained by low-pass filtering and down-sampling the original intensity image. The normalized approximation coefficients are transformed using a hyperbolic sine curve and the contrast enhancement is realized by tuning the magnitude of the each coefficient with respect to surrounding coefficients. The transformed coefficients are then de-normalized to their original range. The detail coefficients are also modified to prevent edge deformation. The inverse wavelet transform is carried out resulting in a lower dynamic range and contrast enhanced intensity image. A color restoration process based on the relationship between spectral bands and the luminance of the original image is applied to convert the enhanced intensity image back to a color image. Although the colors of the enhanced images produced by the proposed algorithm are consistent with the colors of the original image, the proposed algorithm fails to produce color constant results for some pathological scenes that have very strong spectral characteristics in a single band. The linear color restoration process is the main reason for this drawback. Hence, a different approach is required for tackling the color constancy problem. The illuminant is modeled having an effect on the image histogram as a linear shift and adjust the image histogram to discount the illuminant. The WDRC algorithm is then applied with a slight modification, i.e. instead of using a linear color restoration, a non-linear color restoration process employing the spectral context relationships of the original image is applied. The proposed technique solves the color constancy issue and the overall enhancement algorithm provides attractive results improving visibility even for scenes with near-zero visibility conditions. In this research, a new wavelet-based image interpolation technique that can be used for improving the visibility of tiny features in an image is presented. In wavelet domain interpolation techniques, the input image is usually treated as the low-pass filtered subbands of an unknown wavelet-transformed high-resolution (HR) image, and then the unknown high-resolution image is produced by estimating the wavelet coefficients of the high-pass filtered subbands. The same approach is used to obtain an initial estimate of the high-resolution image by zero filling the high-pass filtered subbands. Detail coefficients are estimated via feeding this initial estimate to an undecimated wavelet transform (UWT). Taking an inverse transform after replacing the approximation coefficients of the UWT with initially estimated HR image, results in the final interpolated image. Experimental results of the proposed algorithms proved their superiority over the state-of-the-art enhancement and interpolation techniques

    Multi-Modal Enhancement Techniques for Visibility Improvement of Digital Images

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    Image enhancement techniques for visibility improvement of 8-bit color digital images based on spatial domain, wavelet transform domain, and multiple image fusion approaches are investigated in this dissertation research. In the category of spatial domain approach, two enhancement algorithms are developed to deal with problems associated with images captured from scenes with high dynamic ranges. The first technique is based on an illuminance-reflectance (I-R) model of the scene irradiance. The dynamic range compression of the input image is achieved by a nonlinear transformation of the estimated illuminance based on a windowed inverse sigmoid transfer function. A single-scale neighborhood dependent contrast enhancement process is proposed to enhance the high frequency components of the illuminance, which compensates for the contrast degradation of the mid-tone frequency components caused by dynamic range compression. The intensity image obtained by integrating the enhanced illuminance and the extracted reflectance is then converted to a RGB color image through linear color restoration utilizing the color components of the original image. The second technique, named AINDANE, is a two step approach comprised of adaptive luminance enhancement and adaptive contrast enhancement. An image dependent nonlinear transfer function is designed for dynamic range compression and a multiscale image dependent neighborhood approach is developed for contrast enhancement. Real time processing of video streams is realized with the I-R model based technique due to its high speed processing capability while AINDANE produces higher quality enhanced images due to its multi-scale contrast enhancement property. Both the algorithms exhibit balanced luminance, contrast enhancement, higher robustness, and better color consistency when compared with conventional techniques. In the transform domain approach, wavelet transform based image denoising and contrast enhancement algorithms are developed. The denoising is treated as a maximum a posteriori (MAP) estimator problem; a Bivariate probability density function model is introduced to explore the interlevel dependency among the wavelet coefficients. In addition, an approximate solution to the MAP estimation problem is proposed to avoid the use of complex iterative computations to find a numerical solution. This relatively low complexity image denoising algorithm implemented with dual-tree complex wavelet transform (DT-CWT) produces high quality denoised images

    A Fast Dynamic Range Compression with Local Contrast Preservation Algorithm for Low Dynamic Range Image Enhancement

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    [[abstract]]This paper presents a new fast dynamic range compression format with a local-contrast-preservation (FDRCLCP) algorithm to efficiently resolve low dynamic range (LDR) image enhancement problem for natural color images. The proposed FDRCLCP algorithm can combine with any continuously differentiable intensity transfer function to achieve LDR image enhancement. In combination with the FDRCLCP algorithm, a new intensity-transfer function that achieves satisfactory dynamic-range compression while preventing over enhancement in dark regions of the image is proposed. Experimental results validate that the proposed method provides better visual representation in comparison with two existing methods.[[sponsorship]]IEEE Hong Kong Section; IEEE Xi'an Section[[conferencetype]]國際[[conferencedate]]20120812~20120815[[booktype]]電子版[[iscallforpapers]]Y[[conferencelocation]]香

    Astronomical Data Analysis and Sparsity: from Wavelets to Compressed Sensing

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    Wavelets have been used extensively for several years now in astronomy for many purposes, ranging from data filtering and deconvolution, to star and galaxy detection or cosmic ray removal. More recent sparse representations such ridgelets or curvelets have also been proposed for the detection of anisotropic features such cosmic strings in the cosmic microwave background. We review in this paper a range of methods based on sparsity that have been proposed for astronomical data analysis. We also discuss what is the impact of Compressed Sensing, the new sampling theory, in astronomy for collecting the data, transferring them to the earth or reconstructing an image from incomplete measurements.Comment: Submitted. Full paper will figures available at http://jstarck.free.fr/IEEE09_SparseAstro.pd

    A novel simultaneous dynamic range compression and local contrast enhancement algorithm for digital video cameras

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    [[abstract]]This article addresses the problem of low dynamic range image enhancement for commercial digital cameras. A novel simultaneous dynamic range compression and local contrast enhancement algorithm (SDRCLCE) is presented to resolve this problem in a single-stage procedure. The proposed SDRCLCE algorithm is able to combine with many existent intensity transfer functions, which greatly increases the applicability of the proposed method. An adaptive intensity transfer function is also proposed to combine with SDRCLCE algorithm that provides the capability to adjustably control the level of overall lightness and contrast achieved at the enhanced output. Moreover, the proposed method is amenable to parallel processing implementation that allows us to improve the processing speed of SDRCLCE algorithm. Experimental results show that the performance of the proposed method outperforms three state-of-the-art methods in terms of dynamic range compression and local contrast enhancement.[[incitationindex]]SCI[[booktype]]電子

    Dual modality optical coherence tomography : Technology development and biomedical applications

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    Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a cross-sectional imaging modality that is widely used in clinical ophthalmology and interventional cardiology. It is highly promising for in situ characterization of tumor tissues. OCT has high spatial resolution and high imaging speed to assist clinical decision making in real-time. OCT can be used in both structural imaging and mechanical characterization. Malignant tumor tissue alters morphology. Additionally, structural OCT imaging has limited tissue differentiation capability because of the complex and noisy nature of the OCT signal. Moreover, the contrast of structural OCT signal derived from tissue’s light scattering properties has little chemical specificity. Hence, interrogating additional tissue properties using OCT would improve the outcome of OCT’s clinical applications. In addition to morphological difference, pathological tissue such as cancer breast tissue usually possesses higher stiffness compared to the normal healthy tissue, which indicates a compelling reason for the specific combination of structural OCT imaging with stiffness assessment in the development of dual-modality OCT system for the characterization of the breast cancer diagnosis. This dissertation seeks to integrate the structural OCT imaging and the optical coherence elastography (OCE) for breast cancer tissue characterization. OCE is a functional extension of OCT. OCE measures the mechanical response (deformation, resonant frequency, elastic wave propagation) of biological tissues under external or internal mechanical stimulation and extracts the mechanical properties of tissue related to its pathological and physiological processes. Conventional OCE techniques (i.e., compression, surface acoustic wave, magnetomotive OCE) measure the strain field and the results of OCE measurement are different under different loading conditions. Inconsistency is observed between OCE characterization results from different measurement sessions. Therefore, a robust mechanical characterization is required for force/stress quantification. A quantitative optical coherence elastography (qOCE) that tracks both force and displacement is proposed and developed at NJIT. qOCE instrument is based on a fiber optic probe integrated with a Fabry-Perot force sensor and the miniature probe can be delivered to arbitrary locations within animal or human body. In this dissertation, the principle of qOCE technology is described. Experimental results are acquired to demonstrate the capability of qOCE in characterizing the elasticity of biological tissue. Moreover, a handheld optical instrument is developed to allow in vivo real-time OCE characterization based on an adaptive Doppler analysis algorithm to accurately track the motion of sample under compression. For the development of the dual modality OCT system, the structural OCT images exhibit additive and multiplicative noises that degrade the image quality. To suppress noise in OCT imaging, a noise adaptive wavelet thresholding (NAWT) algorithm is developed to remove the speckle noise in OCT images. NAWT algorithm characterizes the speckle noise in the wavelet domain adaptively and removes the speckle noise while preserving the sample structure. Furthermore, a novel denoising algorithm is also developed that adaptively eliminates the additive noise from the complex OCT using Doppler variation analysis

    Graph Spectral Image Processing

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    Recent advent of graph signal processing (GSP) has spurred intensive studies of signals that live naturally on irregular data kernels described by graphs (e.g., social networks, wireless sensor networks). Though a digital image contains pixels that reside on a regularly sampled 2D grid, if one can design an appropriate underlying graph connecting pixels with weights that reflect the image structure, then one can interpret the image (or image patch) as a signal on a graph, and apply GSP tools for processing and analysis of the signal in graph spectral domain. In this article, we overview recent graph spectral techniques in GSP specifically for image / video processing. The topics covered include image compression, image restoration, image filtering and image segmentation
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