891 research outputs found

    Signal restoration from data aliased in time

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    This paper deals with the problem of signal restoration from data aliased in time. The signal, which is in general noncausal, is split into a causal and an anticausal part. The causal part and the time-reversed anticausal part are then modeled as impulse responses of rational pole-zero models. The parameters of these models are then estimated by solving sets of overdetermined equations. The choice of model orders, i.e., number of poles and zeros of rational models, is also discussed. It is shown that if the aliasing period is large enough, there is sufficient information for all the parameters to be estimated. The special cases of a purely causal signal or a purely anticausal signal are discussed. Simulation results show that the signal can be recovered with excellent accuracy

    Single Frame Image super Resolution using Learned Directionlets

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    In this paper, a new directionally adaptive, learning based, single image super resolution method using multiple direction wavelet transform, called Directionlets is presented. This method uses directionlets to effectively capture directional features and to extract edge information along different directions of a set of available high resolution images .This information is used as the training set for super resolving a low resolution input image and the Directionlet coefficients at finer scales of its high-resolution image are learned locally from this training set and the inverse Directionlet transform recovers the super-resolved high resolution image. The simulation results showed that the proposed approach outperforms standard interpolation techniques like Cubic spline interpolation as well as standard Wavelet-based learning, both visually and in terms of the mean squared error (mse) values. This method gives good result with aliased images also.Comment: 14 pages,6 figure

    Wavelet Integrated CNNs for Noise-Robust Image Classification

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    Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) are generally prone to noise interruptions, i.e., small image noise can cause drastic changes in the output. To suppress the noise effect to the final predication, we enhance CNNs by replacing max-pooling, strided-convolution, and average-pooling with Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT). We present general DWT and Inverse DWT (IDWT) layers applicable to various wavelets like Haar, Daubechies, and Cohen, etc., and design wavelet integrated CNNs (WaveCNets) using these layers for image classification. In WaveCNets, feature maps are decomposed into the low-frequency and high-frequency components during the down-sampling. The low-frequency component stores main information including the basic object structures, which is transmitted into the subsequent layers to extract robust high-level features. The high-frequency components, containing most of the data noise, are dropped during inference to improve the noise-robustness of the WaveCNets. Our experimental results on ImageNet and ImageNet-C (the noisy version of ImageNet) show that WaveCNets, the wavelet integrated versions of VGG, ResNets, and DenseNet, achieve higher accuracy and better noise-robustness than their vanilla versions.Comment: CVPR accepted pape

    Constrained least-squares digital image restoration

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    The design of a digital image restoration filter must address four concerns: the completeness of the underlying imaging system model, the validity of the restoration metric used to derive the filter, the computational efficiency of the algorithm for computing the filter values and the ability to apply the filter in the spatial domain. Consistent with these four concerns, this dissertation presents a constrained least-squares (CLS) restoration filter for digital image restoration. The CLS restoration filter is based on a comprehensive, continuous-input/discrete- processing/continuous-output (c/d/c) imaging system model that accounts for acquisition blur, spatial sampling, additive noise and imperfect image reconstruction. The c/d/c model-based CLS restoration filter can be applied rigorously and is easier to compute than the corresponding c/d/c model-based Wiener restoration filter. The CLS restoration filter can be efficiently implemented in the spatial domain as a small convolution kernel. Simulated restorations are used to illustrate the CLS filter\u27s performance for a range of imaging conditions. Restoration studies based, in part, on an actual Forward Looking Infrared (FLIR) imaging system, show that the CLS restoration filter can be used for effective range reduction. The CLS restoration filter is also successfully tested on blurred and noisy radiometric images of the earth\u27s outgoing radiation field from a satellite-borne scanning radiometer used by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) for atmospheric research
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