The advancement of imaging devices and countless images generated everyday
pose an increasingly high demand on image denoising, which still remains a
challenging task in terms of both effectiveness and efficiency. To improve
denoising quality, numerous denoising techniques and approaches have been
proposed in the past decades, including different transforms, regularization
terms, algebraic representations and especially advanced deep neural network
(DNN) architectures. Despite their sophistication, many methods may fail to
achieve desirable results for simultaneous noise removal and fine detail
preservation. In this paper, to investigate the applicability of existing
denoising techniques, we compare a variety of denoising methods on both
synthetic and real-world datasets for different applications. We also introduce
a new dataset for benchmarking, and the evaluations are performed from four
different perspectives including quantitative metrics, visual effects, human
ratings and computational cost. Our experiments demonstrate: (i) the
effectiveness and efficiency of representative traditional denoisers for
various denoising tasks, (ii) a simple matrix-based algorithm may be able to
produce similar results compared with its tensor counterparts, and (iii) the
notable achievements of DNN models, which exhibit impressive generalization
ability and show state-of-the-art performance on various datasets. In spite of
the progress in recent years, we discuss shortcomings and possible extensions
of existing techniques. Datasets, code and results are made publicly available
and will be continuously updated at
https://github.com/ZhaomingKong/Denoising-Comparison.Comment: In this paper, we intend to collect and compare various denoising
methods to investigate their effectiveness, efficiency, applicability and
generalization ability with both synthetic and real-world experiment