A Framework for Fast Image Deconvolution with Incomplete Observations
February 03, 2016 Β· Entered Twilight Β· π IEEE Transactions on Image Processing
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Repo contents: LICENSE.txt, README.md, data, demos, src
Authors
Miguel SimΓ΅es, Luis B. Almeida, JosΓ© Bioucas-Dias, Jocelyn Chanussot
arXiv ID
1602.01410
Category
cs.CV: Computer Vision
Cross-listed
stat.ML
Citations
15
Venue
IEEE Transactions on Image Processing
Repository
https://github.com/alfaiate/DeconvolutionIncompleteObs
β 10
Last Checked
2 months ago
Abstract
In image deconvolution problems, the diagonalization of the underlying operators by means of the FFT usually yields very large speedups. When there are incomplete observations (e.g., in the case of unknown boundaries), standard deconvolution techniques normally involve non-diagonalizable operators, resulting in rather slow methods, or, otherwise, use inexact convolution models, resulting in the occurrence of artifacts in the enhanced images. In this paper, we propose a new deconvolution framework for images with incomplete observations that allows us to work with diagonalized convolution operators, and therefore is very fast. We iteratively alternate the estimation of the unknown pixels and of the deconvolved image, using, e.g., an FFT-based deconvolution method. This framework is an efficient, high-quality alternative to existing methods of dealing with the image boundaries, such as edge tapering. It can be used with any fast deconvolution method. We give an example in which a state-of-the-art method that assumes periodic boundary conditions is extended, through the use of this framework, to unknown boundary conditions. Furthermore, we propose a specific implementation of this framework, based on the alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM). We provide a proof of convergence for the resulting algorithm, which can be seen as a "partial" ADMM, in which not all variables are dualized. We report experimental comparisons with other primal-dual methods, where the proposed one performed at the level of the state of the art. Four different kinds of applications were tested in the experiments: deconvolution, deconvolution with inpainting, superresolution, and demosaicing, all with unknown boundaries.
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