9 research outputs found

    An Image Enhancement Approach to Achieve High Speed Using Adaptive Modified Bilateral Filter for Satellite Images Using FPGA

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    For real time application scenarios of image processing, satellite imaginary has grown more interest by researches due to the informative nature of image. Satellite images are captured using high quality cameras. These images are captured from space using on-board cameras. Wrong ISO setting, camera vibrations or wrong sensory setting causes noise. The degraded image can cause less efficient results during visual perception which is a challenging issue for researchers. Another reason is that noise corrupts the image during acquisition, transmission, interference or dust particles on the scanner screen of image from satellite to the earth stations. If quality degraded images are used for further processing then it may result in wrong information extraction. In order to cater this issue, image filtering or denoising approach is required. Since remote sensing images are captured from space using on-board camera which requires high speed operating device which can provide better reconstruction quality by utilizing lesser power consumption. Recently various approaches have been proposed for image filtering. Key challenges with these approaches are reconstruction quality, operating speed, image quality by preserving information at edges on image. Proposed approach is named as modified bilateral filter. In this approach bilateral filter and kernel schemes are combined. In order to overcome the drawbacks, modified bilateral filtering by using FPGA to perform the parallelism process for denoising is implemented

    Theoretical foundations for 1-D shock filtering

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    While shock filters are popular morphological image enhancement methods, no well-posedness theory is available for their corresponding partial differential equations (PDEs). By analysing the dynamical system of ordinary differential equations that results from a space discretisation of a PDE for 1-D shock filtering, we derive an analytical solution and prove well-posedness. We show that the results carry over to the fully discrete case when an explicit time discretisation is applied. Finally we establish an equivalence result between discrete shock filtering and local mode filtering

    Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Pattern Recognition

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    journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/pr Edge-preserving smoothing using a similarity measure in adaptive geodesi

    Morphological bilateral filtering

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    International audienceA current challenging topic in mathematical morphology is the construction of locally adaptive operators; i.e., structuring functions that are dependent on the input image itself at each position. Development of spatially-variant filtering is well established in the theory and practice of Gaussian filtering. The aim of the first part of the paper is to study how to generalize these convolution-based approaches in order to introduce adaptive nonlinear filters that asymptotically correspond to spatially-variant morphological dilation and erosion. In particular, starting from the bilateral filtering framework and using the notion of counter-harmonic mean, our goal is to propose a new low complexity approach to define spatially-variant bilateral structuring functions. Then, in the second part of the paper, an original formulation of spatially-variant flat morphological filters is proposed, where the adaptive structuring elements are obtained by thresholding the bilateral structuring functions. The methodological results of the paper are illustrated with various comparative examples

    Nonlocal smoothing and adaptive morphology for scalar- and matrix-valued images

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    In this work we deal with two classic degradation processes in image analysis, namely noise contamination and incomplete data. Standard greyscale and colour photographs as well as matrix-valued images, e.g. diffusion-tensor magnetic resonance imaging, may be corrupted by Gaussian or impulse noise, and may suffer from missing data. In this thesis we develop novel reconstruction approaches to image smoothing and image completion that are applicable to both scalar- and matrix-valued images. For the image smoothing problem, we propose discrete variational methods consisting of nonlocal data and smoothness constraints that penalise general dissimilarity measures. We obtain edge-preserving filters by the joint use of such measures rich in texture content together with robust non-convex penalisers. For the image completion problem, we introduce adaptive, anisotropic morphological partial differential equations modelling the dilation and erosion processes. They adjust themselves to the local geometry to adaptively fill in missing data, complete broken directional structures and even enhance flow-like patterns in an anisotropic manner. The excellent reconstruction capabilities of the proposed techniques are tested on various synthetic and real-world data sets.In dieser Arbeit beschäftigen wir uns mit zwei klassischen Störungsquellen in der Bildanalyse, nämlich mit Rauschen und unvollständigen Daten. Klassische Grauwert- und Farb-Fotografien wie auch matrixwertige Bilder, zum Beispiel Diffusionstensor-Magnetresonanz-Aufnahmen, können durch Gauß- oder Impulsrauschen gestört werden, oder können durch fehlende Daten gestört sein. In dieser Arbeit entwickeln wir neue Rekonstruktionsverfahren zum zur Bildglättung und zur Bildvervollständigung, die sowohl auf skalar- als auch auf matrixwertige Bilddaten anwendbar sind. Zur Lösung des Bildglättungsproblems schlagen wir diskrete Variationsverfahren vor, die aus nichtlokalen Daten- und Glattheitstermen bestehen und allgemeine auf Bildausschnitten definierte Unähnlichkeitsmaße bestrafen. Kantenerhaltende Filter werden durch die gemeinsame Verwendung solcher Maße in stark texturierten Regionen zusammen mit robusten nichtkonvexen Straffunktionen möglich. Für das Problem der Datenvervollständigung führen wir adaptive anisotrope morphologische partielle Differentialgleichungen ein, die Dilatations- und Erosionsprozesse modellieren. Diese passen sich der lokalen Geometrie an, um adaptiv fehlende Daten aufzufüllen, unterbrochene gerichtet Strukturen zu schließen und sogar flussartige Strukturen anisotrop zu verstärken. Die ausgezeichneten Rekonstruktionseigenschaften der vorgestellten Techniken werden anhand verschiedener synthetischer und realer Datensätze demonstriert

    Computational Video Enhancement

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    During a video, each scene element is often imaged many times by the sensor. I propose that by combining information from each captured frame throughout the video it is possible to enhance the entire video. This concept is the basis of computational video enhancement. In this dissertation, the viability of computational video processing is explored in addition to presenting applications where this processing method can be leveraged. Spatio-temporal volumes are employed as a framework for efficient computational video processing, and I extend them by introducing sheared volumes. Shearing provides spatial frame warping for alignment between frames, allowing temporally-adjacent samples to be processed using traditional editing and filtering approaches. An efficient filter-graph framework is presented to support this processing along with a prototype video editing and manipulation tool utilizing that framework. To demonstrate the integration of samples from multiple frames, I introduce methods for improving poorly exposed low-light videos to achieve improved results. This integration is guided by a tone-mapping process to determine spatially-varying optimal exposures and an adaptive spatio-temporal filter to integrate the samples. Low-light video enhancement is also addressed in the multispectral domain by combining visible and infrared samples. This is facilitated by the use of a novel multispectral edge-preserving filter to enhance only the visible spectrum video. Finally, the temporal characteristics of videos are altered by a computational video resampling process. By resampling the video-rate footage, novel time-lapse sequences are found that optimize for user-specified characteristics. Each resulting shorter video is a more faithful summary of the original source than a traditional time-lapse video. Simultaneously, new synthetic exposures are generated to alter the output video's aliasing characteristics
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