50,100 research outputs found
Visual-Quality-Driven Learning for Underwater Vision Enhancement
The image processing community has witnessed remarkable advances in enhancing
and restoring images. Nevertheless, restoring the visual quality of underwater
images remains a great challenge. End-to-end frameworks might fail to enhance
the visual quality of underwater images since in several scenarios it is not
feasible to provide the ground truth of the scene radiance. In this work, we
propose a CNN-based approach that does not require ground truth data since it
uses a set of image quality metrics to guide the restoration learning process.
The experiments showed that our method improved the visual quality of
underwater images preserving their edges and also performed well considering
the UCIQE metric.Comment: Accepted for publication and presented in 2018 IEEE International
Conference on Image Processing (ICIP
How is Gaze Influenced by Image Transformations? Dataset and Model
Data size is the bottleneck for developing deep saliency models, because
collecting eye-movement data is very time consuming and expensive. Most of
current studies on human attention and saliency modeling have used high quality
stereotype stimuli. In real world, however, captured images undergo various
types of transformations. Can we use these transformations to augment existing
saliency datasets? Here, we first create a novel saliency dataset including
fixations of 10 observers over 1900 images degraded by 19 types of
transformations. Second, by analyzing eye movements, we find that observers
look at different locations over transformed versus original images. Third, we
utilize the new data over transformed images, called data augmentation
transformation (DAT), to train deep saliency models. We find that label
preserving DATs with negligible impact on human gaze boost saliency prediction,
whereas some other DATs that severely impact human gaze degrade the
performance. These label preserving valid augmentation transformations provide
a solution to enlarge existing saliency datasets. Finally, we introduce a novel
saliency model based on generative adversarial network (dubbed GazeGAN). A
modified UNet is proposed as the generator of the GazeGAN, which combines
classic skip connections with a novel center-surround connection (CSC), in
order to leverage multi level features. We also propose a histogram loss based
on Alternative Chi Square Distance (ACS HistLoss) to refine the saliency map in
terms of luminance distribution. Extensive experiments and comparisons over 3
datasets indicate that GazeGAN achieves the best performance in terms of
popular saliency evaluation metrics, and is more robust to various
perturbations. Our code and data are available at:
https://github.com/CZHQuality/Sal-CFS-GAN
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