24,380 research outputs found
Stochastic forward-backward and primal-dual approximation algorithms with application to online image restoration
Stochastic approximation techniques have been used in various contexts in
data science. We propose a stochastic version of the forward-backward algorithm
for minimizing the sum of two convex functions, one of which is not necessarily
smooth. Our framework can handle stochastic approximations of the gradient of
the smooth function and allows for stochastic errors in the evaluation of the
proximity operator of the nonsmooth function. The almost sure convergence of
the iterates generated by the algorithm to a minimizer is established under
relatively mild assumptions. We also propose a stochastic version of a popular
primal-dual proximal splitting algorithm, establish its convergence, and apply
it to an online image restoration problem.Comment: 5 Figure
A Non-Local Structure Tensor Based Approach for Multicomponent Image Recovery Problems
Non-Local Total Variation (NLTV) has emerged as a useful tool in variational
methods for image recovery problems. In this paper, we extend the NLTV-based
regularization to multicomponent images by taking advantage of the Structure
Tensor (ST) resulting from the gradient of a multicomponent image. The proposed
approach allows us to penalize the non-local variations, jointly for the
different components, through various matrix norms with .
To facilitate the choice of the hyper-parameters, we adopt a constrained convex
optimization approach in which we minimize the data fidelity term subject to a
constraint involving the ST-NLTV regularization. The resulting convex
optimization problem is solved with a novel epigraphical projection method.
This formulation can be efficiently implemented thanks to the flexibility
offered by recent primal-dual proximal algorithms. Experiments are carried out
for multispectral and hyperspectral images. The results demonstrate the
interest of introducing a non-local structure tensor regularization and show
that the proposed approach leads to significant improvements in terms of
convergence speed over current state-of-the-art methods
An Augmented Lagrangian Approach to the Constrained Optimization Formulation of Imaging Inverse Problems
We propose a new fast algorithm for solving one of the standard approaches to
ill-posed linear inverse problems (IPLIP), where a (possibly non-smooth)
regularizer is minimized under the constraint that the solution explains the
observations sufficiently well. Although the regularizer and constraint are
usually convex, several particular features of these problems (huge
dimensionality, non-smoothness) preclude the use of off-the-shelf optimization
tools and have stimulated a considerable amount of research. In this paper, we
propose a new efficient algorithm to handle one class of constrained problems
(often known as basis pursuit denoising) tailored to image recovery
applications. The proposed algorithm, which belongs to the family of augmented
Lagrangian methods, can be used to deal with a variety of imaging IPLIP,
including deconvolution and reconstruction from compressive observations (such
as MRI), using either total-variation or wavelet-based (or, more generally,
frame-based) regularization. The proposed algorithm is an instance of the
so-called "alternating direction method of multipliers", for which convergence
sufficient conditions are known; we show that these conditions are satisfied by
the proposed algorithm. Experiments on a set of image restoration and
reconstruction benchmark problems show that the proposed algorithm is a strong
contender for the state-of-the-art.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure, 8 tables. Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on
Image Processin
Multiplicative Noise Removal Using Variable Splitting and Constrained Optimization
Multiplicative noise (also known as speckle noise) models are central to the
study of coherent imaging systems, such as synthetic aperture radar and sonar,
and ultrasound and laser imaging. These models introduce two additional layers
of difficulties with respect to the standard Gaussian additive noise scenario:
(1) the noise is multiplied by (rather than added to) the original image; (2)
the noise is not Gaussian, with Rayleigh and Gamma being commonly used
densities. These two features of multiplicative noise models preclude the
direct application of most state-of-the-art algorithms, which are designed for
solving unconstrained optimization problems where the objective has two terms:
a quadratic data term (log-likelihood), reflecting the additive and Gaussian
nature of the noise, plus a convex (possibly nonsmooth) regularizer (e.g., a
total variation or wavelet-based regularizer/prior). In this paper, we address
these difficulties by: (1) converting the multiplicative model into an additive
one by taking logarithms, as proposed by some other authors; (2) using variable
splitting to obtain an equivalent constrained problem; and (3) dealing with
this optimization problem using the augmented Lagrangian framework. A set of
experiments shows that the proposed method, which we name MIDAL (multiplicative
image denoising by augmented Lagrangian), yields state-of-the-art results both
in terms of speed and denoising performance.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. To appear in the IEEE Transactions on
Image Processing
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
- …