20,674 research outputs found
Learning a Mixture of Deep Networks for Single Image Super-Resolution
Single image super-resolution (SR) is an ill-posed problem which aims to
recover high-resolution (HR) images from their low-resolution (LR)
observations. The crux of this problem lies in learning the complex mapping
between low-resolution patches and the corresponding high-resolution patches.
Prior arts have used either a mixture of simple regression models or a single
non-linear neural network for this propose. This paper proposes the method of
learning a mixture of SR inference modules in a unified framework to tackle
this problem. Specifically, a number of SR inference modules specialized in
different image local patterns are first independently applied on the LR image
to obtain various HR estimates, and the resultant HR estimates are adaptively
aggregated to form the final HR image. By selecting neural networks as the SR
inference module, the whole procedure can be incorporated into a unified
network and be optimized jointly. Extensive experiments are conducted to
investigate the relation between restoration performance and different network
architectures. Compared with other current image SR approaches, our proposed
method achieves state-of-the-arts restoration results on a wide range of images
consistently while allowing more flexible design choices. The source codes are
available in http://www.ifp.illinois.edu/~dingliu2/accv2016
Image Deblurring and Super-resolution by Adaptive Sparse Domain Selection and Adaptive Regularization
As a powerful statistical image modeling technique, sparse representation has
been successfully used in various image restoration applications. The success
of sparse representation owes to the development of l1-norm optimization
techniques, and the fact that natural images are intrinsically sparse in some
domain. The image restoration quality largely depends on whether the employed
sparse domain can represent well the underlying image. Considering that the
contents can vary significantly across different images or different patches in
a single image, we propose to learn various sets of bases from a pre-collected
dataset of example image patches, and then for a given patch to be processed,
one set of bases are adaptively selected to characterize the local sparse
domain. We further introduce two adaptive regularization terms into the sparse
representation framework. First, a set of autoregressive (AR) models are
learned from the dataset of example image patches. The best fitted AR models to
a given patch are adaptively selected to regularize the image local structures.
Second, the image non-local self-similarity is introduced as another
regularization term. In addition, the sparsity regularization parameter is
adaptively estimated for better image restoration performance. Extensive
experiments on image deblurring and super-resolution validate that by using
adaptive sparse domain selection and adaptive regularization, the proposed
method achieves much better results than many state-of-the-art algorithms in
terms of both PSNR and visual perception.Comment: 35 pages. This paper is under review in IEEE TI
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