30,628 research outputs found
Range-Point Migration-Based Image Expansion Method Exploiting Fully Polarimetric Data for UWB Short-Range Radar
Ultrawideband radar with high-range resolution is a promising technology for use in short-range 3-D imaging applications, in which optical cameras are not applicable. One of the most efficient 3-D imaging methods is the range-point migration (RPM) method, which has a definite advantage for the synthetic aperture radar approach in terms of computational burden, high accuracy, and high spatial resolution. However, if an insufficient aperture size or angle is provided, these kinds of methods cannot reconstruct the whole target structure due to the absence of reflection signals from large part of target surface. To expand the 3-D image obtained by RPM, this paper proposes an image expansion method by incorporating the RPM feature and fully polarimetric data-based machine learning approach. Following ellipsoid-based scattering analysis and learning with a neural network, this method expresses the target image as an aggregation of parts of ellipsoids, which significantly expands the original image by the RPM method without sacrificing the reconstruction accuracy. The results of numerical simulation based on 3-D finite-difference time-domain analysis verify the effectiveness of our proposed method, in terms of image-expansion criteria
Multiplicative Noise Removal Using L1 Fidelity on Frame Coefficients
We address the denoising of images contaminated with multiplicative noise,
e.g. speckle noise. Classical ways to solve such problems are filtering,
statistical (Bayesian) methods, variational methods, and methods that convert
the multiplicative noise into additive noise (using a logarithmic function),
shrinkage of the coefficients of the log-image data in a wavelet basis or in a
frame, and transform back the result using an exponential function. We propose
a method composed of several stages: we use the log-image data and apply a
reasonable under-optimal hard-thresholding on its curvelet transform; then we
apply a variational method where we minimize a specialized criterion composed
of an data-fitting to the thresholded coefficients and a Total
Variation regularization (TV) term in the image domain; the restored image is
an exponential of the obtained minimizer, weighted in a way that the mean of
the original image is preserved. Our restored images combine the advantages of
shrinkage and variational methods and avoid their main drawbacks. For the
minimization stage, we propose a properly adapted fast minimization scheme
based on Douglas-Rachford splitting. The existence of a minimizer of our
specialized criterion being proven, we demonstrate the convergence of the
minimization scheme. The obtained numerical results outperform the main
alternative methods
Calipso: Physics-based Image and Video Editing through CAD Model Proxies
We present Calipso, an interactive method for editing images and videos in a
physically-coherent manner. Our main idea is to realize physics-based
manipulations by running a full physics simulation on proxy geometries given by
non-rigidly aligned CAD models. Running these simulations allows us to apply
new, unseen forces to move or deform selected objects, change physical
parameters such as mass or elasticity, or even add entire new objects that
interact with the rest of the underlying scene. In Calipso, the user makes
edits directly in 3D; these edits are processed by the simulation and then
transfered to the target 2D content using shape-to-image correspondences in a
photo-realistic rendering process. To align the CAD models, we introduce an
efficient CAD-to-image alignment procedure that jointly minimizes for rigid and
non-rigid alignment while preserving the high-level structure of the input
shape. Moreover, the user can choose to exploit image flow to estimate scene
motion, producing coherent physical behavior with ambient dynamics. We
demonstrate Calipso's physics-based editing on a wide range of examples
producing myriad physical behavior while preserving geometric and visual
consistency.Comment: 11 page
GP-GAN: Gender Preserving GAN for Synthesizing Faces from Landmarks
Facial landmarks constitute the most compressed representation of faces and
are known to preserve information such as pose, gender and facial structure
present in the faces. Several works exist that attempt to perform high-level
face-related analysis tasks based on landmarks. In contrast, in this work, an
attempt is made to tackle the inverse problem of synthesizing faces from their
respective landmarks. The primary aim of this work is to demonstrate that
information preserved by landmarks (gender in particular) can be further
accentuated by leveraging generative models to synthesize corresponding faces.
Though the problem is particularly challenging due to its ill-posed nature, we
believe that successful synthesis will enable several applications such as
boosting performance of high-level face related tasks using landmark points and
performing dataset augmentation. To this end, a novel face-synthesis method
known as Gender Preserving Generative Adversarial Network (GP-GAN) that is
guided by adversarial loss, perceptual loss and a gender preserving loss is
presented. Further, we propose a novel generator sub-network UDeNet for GP-GAN
that leverages advantages of U-Net and DenseNet architectures. Extensive
experiments and comparison with recent methods are performed to verify the
effectiveness of the proposed method.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, this paper is accepted as 2018 24th International
Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR2018
- …