13,946 research outputs found
High-speed Video from Asynchronous Camera Array
This paper presents a method for capturing high-speed video using an
asynchronous camera array. Our method sequentially fires each sensor in a
camera array with a small time offset and assembles captured frames into a
high-speed video according to the time stamps. The resulting video, however,
suffers from parallax jittering caused by the viewpoint difference among
sensors in the camera array. To address this problem, we develop a dedicated
novel view synthesis algorithm that transforms the video frames as if they were
captured by a single reference sensor. Specifically, for any frame from a
non-reference sensor, we find the two temporally neighboring frames captured by
the reference sensor. Using these three frames, we render a new frame with the
same time stamp as the non-reference frame but from the viewpoint of the
reference sensor. Specifically, we segment these frames into super-pixels and
then apply local content-preserving warping to warp them to form the new frame.
We employ a multi-label Markov Random Field method to blend these warped
frames. Our experiments show that our method can produce high-quality and
high-speed video of a wide variety of scenes with large parallax, scene
dynamics, and camera motion and outperforms several baseline and
state-of-the-art approaches.Comment: 10 pages, 82 figures, Published at IEEE WACV 201
No-reference Image Denoising Quality Assessment
A wide variety of image denoising methods are available now. However, the
performance of a denoising algorithm often depends on individual input noisy
images as well as its parameter setting. In this paper, we present a
no-reference image denoising quality assessment method that can be used to
select for an input noisy image the right denoising algorithm with the optimal
parameter setting. This is a challenging task as no ground truth is available.
This paper presents a data-driven approach to learn to predict image denoising
quality. Our method is based on the observation that while individual existing
quality metrics and denoising models alone cannot robustly rank denoising
results, they often complement each other. We accordingly design denoising
quality features based on these existing metrics and models and then use Random
Forests Regression to aggregate them into a more powerful unified metric. Our
experiments on images with various types and levels of noise show that our
no-reference denoising quality assessment method significantly outperforms the
state-of-the-art quality metrics. This paper also provides a method that
leverages our quality assessment method to automatically tune the parameter
settings of a denoising algorithm for an input noisy image to produce an
optimal denoising result.Comment: 17 pages, 41 figures, accepted by Computer Vision Conference (CVC)
201
- …