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Digital Stack Photography and Its Applications

<p>This work centers on digital stack photography and its applications.</p><p>A stack of images refer, in a broader sense, to an ensemble of</p><p>associated images taken with variation in one or more than one various </p><p>values in one or more parameters in system configuration or setting.</p><p>An image stack captures and contains potentially more information than</p><p>any of the constituent images. Digital stack photography (DST)</p><p>techniques explore the rich information to render a synthesized image</p><p>that oversteps the limitation in a digital camera's capabilities.</p><p>This work considers in particular two basic DST problems, which had</p><p>been challenging, and their applications. One is high-dynamic-range</p><p>(HDR) imaging of non-stationary dynamic scenes, in which the stacked</p><p>images vary in exposure conditions. The other</p><p>is large scale panorama composition from multiple images. In this</p><p>case, the image components are related to each other by the spatial</p><p>relation among the subdomains of the same scene they covered and</p><p>captured jointly. We consider the non-conventional, practical and</p><p>challenge situations where the spatial overlap among the sub-images is</p><p>sparse (S), irregular in geometry and imprecise from the designed</p><p>geometry (I), and the captured data over the overlap zones are noisy</p><p>(N) or lack of features. We refer to these conditions simply as the</p><p>S.I.N. conditions.</p><p>There are common challenging issues with both problems. For example,</p><p>both faced the dominant problem with image alignment for</p><p>seamless and artifact-free image composition. Our solutions to the</p><p>common problems are manifested differently in each of the particular</p><p>problems, as a result of adaption to the specific properties in each</p><p>type of image ensembles. For the exposure stack, existing</p><p>alignment approaches struggled to overcome three main challenges:</p><p>inconsistency in brightness, large displacement in dynamic scene and</p><p>pixel saturation. We exploit solutions in the following three</p><p>aspects. In the first, we introduce a model that addresses and admits</p><p>changes in both geometric configurations and optical conditions, while</p><p>following the traditional optical flow description. Previous models</p><p>treated these two types of changes one or the other, namely, with</p><p>mutual exclusions. Next, we extend the pixel-based optical flow model</p><p>to a patch-based model. There are two-fold advantages. A patch has</p><p>texture and local content that individual pixels fail to present. It</p><p>also renders opportunities for faster processing, such as via</p><p>two-scale or multiple-scale processing. The extended model is then</p><p>solved efficiently with an EM-like algorithm, which is reliable in the</p><p>presence of large displacement. Thirdly, we present a generative</p><p>model for reducing or eliminating typical artifacts as a side effect</p><p>of an inadequate alignment for clipped pixels. A patch-based texture</p><p>synthesis is combined with the patch-based alignment to achieve an</p><p>artifact free result.</p><p>For large-scale panorama composition under the S.I.N. conditions, we</p><p>have developed an effective solution scheme that significantly reduces</p><p>both processing time and artifacts. Previously existing approaches can</p><p>be roughly categorized as either geometry-based composition or feature</p><p>based composition. In the former approach, one relies on precise</p><p>knowledge of the system geometry, by design and/or calibration. It</p><p>works well with a far-away scene, in which case there is only limited</p><p>variation in projective geometry among the sub-images. However, the</p><p>system geometry is not invariant to physical conditions such as</p><p>thermal variation, stress variation and etc.. The composition with</p><p>this approach is typically done in the spatial space. The other</p><p>approach is more robust to geometric and optical conditions. It works</p><p>surprisingly well with feature-rich and stationary scenes, not well</p><p>with the absence of recognizable features. The composition based on</p><p>feature matching is typically done in the spatial gradient domain. In</p><p>short, both approaches are challenged by the S.I.N. conditions. With</p><p>certain snapshot data sets obtained and contributed by Brady et al, </p><p>these methods either fail in composition or render images with</p><p>visually disturbing artifacts. To overcome the S.I.N. conditions, we</p><p>have reconciled these two approaches and made successful and</p><p>complementary use of both priori and approximate information about</p><p>geometric system configuration and the feature information from the</p><p>image data. We also designed and developed a software architecture</p><p>with careful extraction of primitive function modules that can be</p><p>efficiently implemented and executed in parallel. In addition to a</p><p>much faster processing speed, the resulting images are clear and</p><p>sharper at the overlapping zones, without typical ghosting artifacts.</p> / Dissertation

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:DUKE/oai:dukespace.lib.duke.edu:10161/8691
Date January 2014
CreatorsHu, Jun
ContributorsSun, Xiaobai
Source SetsDuke University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation

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