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IMAGE RESTORATIONS USING DEEP LEARNING TECHNIQUES

Conventional methods for solving image restoration problems are typically built on an image degradation model and on some priors of the latent image. The model of the degraded image and the prior knowledge of the latent image are necessary because the restoration is an ill posted inverse problem. However, for some applications, such as those addressed in this thesis, the image degradation process is too complex to model precisely; in addition, mathematical priors, such as low rank and sparsity of the image signal, are often too idealistic for real world images. These difficulties limit the performance of existing image restoration algorithms, but they can be, to certain extent, overcome by the techniques of machine learning, particularly deep convolutional neural networks. Machine learning allows large sample statistics far beyond what is available in a single input image to be exploited. More importantly, the big data can be used to train deep neural networks to learn the complex non-linear mapping between the degraded and original images. This circumvents the difficulty of building an explicit realistic mathematical model when the degradation causes are complex and compounded.

In this thesis, we design and implement deep convolutional neural networks (DCNN) for two challenging image restoration problems: reflection removal and joint demosaicking-deblurring. The first problem is one of blind source separation; its DCNN solution requires a large set of paired clean and mixed images for training. As these paired training images are very difficult, if not impossible, to acquire in the real world, we develop a novel technique to synthesize the required training images that satisfactorily approximate the real ones. For the joint demosaicking-deblurring problem, we propose a new multiscale DCNN architecture consisting of a cascade of subnetworks so that the underlying blind deconvolution task can be broken into smaller subproblems and solved more effectively and robustly. In both cases extensive experiments are carried out. Experimental results demonstrate clear advantages of the proposed DCNN methods over existing ones. / Thesis / Master of Applied Science (MASc)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/24290
Date January 2018
CreatorsChi, Zhixiang
ContributorsWu, Xiaolin, Electrical and Computer Engineering
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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