Image Processing
Modeling Nonlinear Dependencies in Natural Images using Mixture of Laplacian Distribution
Capturing dependencies in images in an unsupervised manner is important for many image processing applications. We propose a new method for capturing nonlinear dependencies in images of natural scenes. This method is an extension of the linear Independent Component Analysis (ICA) method by building a hierarchical model based on ICA and mixture of Laplacian distribution. The model parameters are learned via an EM algorithm and it can accurately capture variance correlation and other high order structures in a simple manner. We visualize the learned variance structure and demonstrate applications to image segmentation and denoising.
Separating a Real-Life Nonlinear Image Mixture
When acquiring an image of a paper document, the image printed on the back page sometimes shows through. The mixture of the front- and back-page images thus obtained is markedly nonlinear, and thus constitutes a good real-life test case for nonlinear blind source separation. This paper addresses a difficult version of this problem, corresponding to the use of "onion skin" paper, which results in a relatively strong nonlinearity of the mixture, which becomes close to singular in the lighter regions of the images. The separation is achieved through the MISEP technique, which is an extension of the well known INFOMAX method. The separation results are assessed with objective quality measures. They show an improvement over the results obtained with linear separation, but have room for further improvement.
Geometric Analysis of Constrained Curves
Srivastava, Anuj, Mio, Washington, Liu, Xiuwen, Klassen, Eric
We present a geometric approach to statistical shape analysis of closed curves in images. The basic idea is to specify a space of closed curves satisfying given constraints, and exploit the differential geometry of this space to solve optimization and inference problems. We demonstrate this approach by: (i) defining and computing statistics of observed shapes, (ii) defining and learning a parametric probability model on shape space, and (iii) designing a binary hypothesis test on this space.
A Sampled Texture Prior for Image Super-Resolution
Pickup, Lyndsey C., Roberts, Stephen J., Zisserman, Andrew
Super-resolution aims to produce a high-resolution image from a set of one or more low-resolution images by recovering or inventing plausible high-frequency image content. Typical approaches try to reconstruct a high-resolution image using the sub-pixel displacements of several lowresolution images, usually regularized by a generic smoothness prior over the high-resolution image space. Other methods use training data to learn low-to-high-resolution matches, and have been highly successful even in the single-input-image case. Here we present a domain-specific image prior in the form of a p.d.f.
A Mixed-Signal VLSI for Real-Time Generation of Edge-Based Image Vectors
Yagi, Masakazu, Yamasaki, Hideo, Shibata, Tadashi
A mixed-signal image filtering VLSI has been developed aiming at real-time generation of edge-based image vectors for robust image recognition. A four-stage asynchronous median detection architecture based on analog digital mixed-signal circuits has been introduced to determine the threshold value of edge detection, the key processing parameter in vector generation. As a result, a fully seamless pipeline processing from threshold detection to edge feature map generation has been established. A prototype chip was designed in a 0.35-ยตm double-polysilicon three-metal-layer CMOS technology and the concept was verified by the fabricated chip. The chip generates a 64-dimension feature vector from a 64x64-pixel gray scale image every 80ยตsec.
Bayesian Color Constancy with Non-Gaussian Models
Rosenberg, Charles, Ladsariya, Alok, Minka, Tom
We present a Bayesian approach to color constancy which utilizes a non-Gaussian probabilistic model of the image formation process. The parameters of this model are estimated directly from an uncalibrated image set and a small number of additional algorithmic parameters are chosen using cross validation. The algorithm is empirically shown to exhibit RMS error lower than other color constancy algorithms based on the Lambertian surface reflectance model when estimating the illuminants of a set of test images. This is demonstrated via a direct performance comparison utilizing a publicly available set of real world test images and code base.
Local Phase Coherence and the Perception of Blur
Wang, Zhou, Simoncelli, Eero P.
Blur is one of the most common forms of image distortion. It can arise from a variety of sources, such as atmospheric scatter, lens defocus, optical aberrations of the lens, and spatial and temporal sensor integration. Human observers are bothered by blur, and our visual systems are quite good at reporting whether an image appears blurred (or sharpened) [1, 2]. However, the mechanism by which this is accomplished is not well understood. Clearly, detection of blur requires some model of what constitutes an unblurred image. In recent years, there has been a surge of interest in the modelling of natural images, both for purposes of improving the performance of image processing and computer vision systems, and also for furthering our understanding of biological visual systems.