5 research outputs found

    CleanPage: Fast and Clean Document and Whiteboard Capture

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    The move from paper to online is not only necessary for remote working, it is also significantly more sustainable. This trend has seen a rising need for the high-quality digitization of content from pages and whiteboards to sharable online material. However, capturing this information is not always easy nor are the results always satisfactory. Available scanning apps vary in their usability and do not always produce clean results, retaining surface imperfections from the page or whiteboard in their output images. CleanPage, a novel smartphone-based document and whiteboard scanning system, is presented. CleanPage requires one button-tap to capture, identify, crop, and clean an image of a page or whiteboard. Unlike equivalent systems, no user intervention is required during processing, and the result is a high-contrast, low-noise image with a clean homogenous background. Results are presented for a selection of scenarios showing the versatility of the design. CleanPage is compared with two market leader scanning apps using two testing approaches: real paper scans and ground-truth comparisons. These comparisons are achieved by a new testing methodology that allows scans to be compared to unscanned counterparts by using synthesized images. Real paper scans are tested using image quality measures. An evaluation of standard image quality assessments is included in this work, and a novel quality measure for scanned images is proposed and validated. The user experience for each scanning app is assessed, showing CleanPage to be fast and easier to use

    Image quality assessment based on the perceived structural similarity index of an image

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    Image quality assessment (IQA) has a very important role and wide applications in image acquisition, storage, transmission and processing. In designing IQA models, human visual system (HVS) characteristics introduced play an important role in improving their performances. In this paper, combining image distortion characteristics with HVS characteristics, based on the structure similarity index (SSIM) model, a novel IQA model based on the perceived structure similarity index (PSIM) of image is proposed. In the method, first, a perception model for HVS perceiving real images is proposed, combining the contrast sensitivity, frequency sensitivity, luminance nonlinearity and masking characteristics of HVS; then, in order to simulate HVS perceiving real image, the real images are processed with the proposed perception model, to eliminate their visual redundancy, thus, the perceived images are obtained; finally, based on the idea and modeling method of SSIM, combining with the features of perceived image, a novel IQA model, namely PSIM, is proposed. Further, in order to illustrate the performance of PSIM, 5335 distorted images with 41 distortion types in four image databases (TID2013, CSIQ, LIVE and CID) are used to simulate from three aspects: overall IQA of each database, IQA for each distortion type of images, and IQA for special distortion types of images. Further, according to the comprehensive benefit of precision, generalization performance and complexity, their IQA results are compared with those of 12 existing IQA models. The experimental results show that the accuracy (PLCC) of PSIM is 9.91% higher than that of SSIM in four databases, on average; and its performance is better than that of 12 existing IQA models. Synthesizing experimental results and theoretical analysis, it is showed that the proposed PSIM model is an effective and excellent IQA model

    No-Reference Quality Assessment for Screen Content Images Based on Hybrid Region Features Fusion

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