26,292 research outputs found
New Classes of Partial Geometries and Their Associated LDPC Codes
The use of partial geometries to construct parity-check matrices for LDPC
codes has resulted in the design of successful codes with a probability of
error close to the Shannon capacity at bit error rates down to . Such
considerations have motivated this further investigation. A new and simple
construction of a type of partial geometries with quasi-cyclic structure is
given and their properties are investigated. The trapping sets of the partial
geometry codes were considered previously using the geometric aspects of the
underlying structure to derive information on the size of allowable trapping
sets. This topic is further considered here. Finally, there is a natural
relationship between partial geometries and strongly regular graphs. The
eigenvalues of the adjacency matrices of such graphs are well known and it is
of interest to determine if any of the Tanner graphs derived from the partial
geometries are good expanders for certain parameter sets, since it can be
argued that codes with good geometric and expansion properties might perform
well under message-passing decoding.Comment: 34 pages with single column, 6 figure
Depth Fields: Extending Light Field Techniques to Time-of-Flight Imaging
A variety of techniques such as light field, structured illumination, and
time-of-flight (TOF) are commonly used for depth acquisition in consumer
imaging, robotics and many other applications. Unfortunately, each technique
suffers from its individual limitations preventing robust depth sensing. In
this paper, we explore the strengths and weaknesses of combining light field
and time-of-flight imaging, particularly the feasibility of an on-chip
implementation as a single hybrid depth sensor. We refer to this combination as
depth field imaging. Depth fields combine light field advantages such as
synthetic aperture refocusing with TOF imaging advantages such as high depth
resolution and coded signal processing to resolve multipath interference. We
show applications including synthesizing virtual apertures for TOF imaging,
improved depth mapping through partial and scattering occluders, and single
frequency TOF phase unwrapping. Utilizing space, angle, and temporal coding,
depth fields can improve depth sensing in the wild and generate new insights
into the dimensions of light's plenoptic function.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, Accepted to 3DV 201
Transformées basées graphes pour la compression de nouvelles modalités d’image
Due to the large availability of new camera types capturing extra geometrical information, as well as the emergence of new image modalities such as light fields and omni-directional images, a huge amount of high dimensional data has to be stored and delivered. The ever growing streaming and storage requirements of these new image modalities require novel image coding tools that exploit the complex structure of those data. This thesis aims at exploring novel graph based approaches for adapting traditional image transform coding techniques to the emerging data types where the sampled information are lying on irregular structures. In a first contribution, novel local graph based transforms are designed for light field compact representations. By leveraging a careful design of local transform supports and a local basis functions optimization procedure, significant improvements in terms of energy compaction can be obtained. Nevertheless, the locality of the supports did not permit to exploit long term dependencies of the signal. This led to a second contribution where different sampling strategies are investigated. Coupled with novel prediction methods, they led to very prominent results for quasi-lossless compression of light fields. The third part of the thesis focuses on the definition of rate-distortion optimized sub-graphs for the coding of omni-directional content. If we move further and give more degree of freedom to the graphs we wish to use, we can learn or define a model (set of weights on the edges) that might not be entirely reliable for transform design. The last part of the thesis is dedicated to theoretically analyze the effect of the uncertainty on the efficiency of the graph transforms.En raison de la grande disponibilité de nouveaux types de caméras capturant des informations géométriques supplémentaires, ainsi que de l'émergence de nouvelles modalités d'image telles que les champs de lumière et les images omnidirectionnelles, il est nécessaire de stocker et de diffuser une quantité énorme de hautes dimensions. Les exigences croissantes en matière de streaming et de stockage de ces nouvelles modalités d’image nécessitent de nouveaux outils de codage d’images exploitant la structure complexe de ces données. Cette thèse a pour but d'explorer de nouvelles approches basées sur les graphes pour adapter les techniques de codage de transformées d'image aux types de données émergents où les informations échantillonnées reposent sur des structures irrégulières. Dans une première contribution, de nouvelles transformées basées sur des graphes locaux sont conçues pour des représentations compactes des champs de lumière. En tirant parti d’une conception minutieuse des supports de transformées locaux et d’une procédure d’optimisation locale des fonctions de base , il est possible d’améliorer considérablement le compaction d'énergie. Néanmoins, la localisation des supports ne permettait pas d'exploiter les dépendances à long terme du signal. Cela a conduit à une deuxième contribution où différentes stratégies d'échantillonnage sont étudiées. Couplés à de nouvelles méthodes de prédiction, ils ont conduit à des résultats très importants en ce qui concerne la compression quasi sans perte de champs de lumière statiques. La troisième partie de la thèse porte sur la définition de sous-graphes optimisés en distorsion de débit pour le codage de contenu omnidirectionnel. Si nous allons plus loin et donnons plus de liberté aux graphes que nous souhaitons utiliser, nous pouvons apprendre ou définir un modèle (ensemble de poids sur les arêtes) qui pourrait ne pas être entièrement fiable pour la conception de transformées. La dernière partie de la thèse est consacrée à l'analyse théorique de l'effet de l'incertitude sur l'efficacité des transformées basées graphes
Graph Spectral Image Processing
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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