RESUMO
Super-resolution (SR) technology provides a far promising computational imaging approach in obtaining a high-resolution (HR) image (or image sequences) from observed multiple low-resolution (LR) images by incorporating complementary information. In this paper, a three-stage SR method is proposed to generate a HR image from infrared (IR) LR Images acquired with Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV). The proposed method integrates a high-level image capturing process and a low-level SR process. In this integrated process, we incorporate UAV path optimization, sub-pixel image registration, and sparseness constraint into a computational imaging framework of a region of interest (ROI). To refine ROI complementary feathers, we design an optimal flight control scheme to acquire adequate image sequences from multi-angles. In particular, a phase correlation approach achieving reliable sub-pixel image feature matching is adapted, on the basis of which an effective sparseness regularization model is built to enhance the fine structures of the IR image. Unlike most traditional multiple-frame SR algorithms that mainly focus on signal processing and achieve good performances when using standard test datasets, the performed experiments with real-life IR sequences indicate the three-stage SR method can also deal with practical LR IR image sequences collected by UAVs. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method is capable of generating HR images with good performance in terms of edge preservation and detail enhancement.
Assuntos
Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Raios Infravermelhos , Razão Sinal-Ruído , Algoritmos , AutomaçãoRESUMO
In this paper, we present a multiclass data classifier, denoted by optimal conformal transformation kernel (OCTK), based on learning a specific kernel model, the CTK, and utilize it in two types of image recognition tasks, namely, face recognition and object categorization. We show that the learned CTK can lead to a desirable spatial geometry change in mapping data from the input space to the feature space, so that the local spatial geometry of the heterogeneous regions is magnified to favor a more refined distinguishing, while that of the homogeneous regions is compressed to neglect or suppress the intraclass variations. This nature of the learned CTK is of great benefit in image recognition, since in image recognition we always have to face a challenge that the images to be classified are with a large intraclass diversity and interclass similarity. Experiments on face recognition and object categorization show that the proposed OCTK classifier achieves the best or second best recognition result compared with that of the state-of-the-art classifiers, no matter what kind of feature or feature representation is used. In computational efficiency, the OCTK classifier can perform significantly faster than the linear support vector machine classifier (linear LIBSVM) can.