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Αλέξανδρος Γ. Σφακιανάκης

Thursday, January 7, 2021

Deblur and deep depth from single defocus image

xlomafota.13 shared this article with you from Inoreader

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Abstract

In this paper, we tackle depth estimation and blur removal from a single out-of-focus image. Previously, depth is estimated, and blurred is removed using multiple images; for example, from multiview or stereo scenes, but doing so with a single image is challenging. Earlier works of monocular images for depth estimated and deblurring either exploited geometric characteristics or priors using hand-crafted features. Lately, there is enough evidence that deep convolutional neural networks (CNN) significantly improved numerous vision applications; hence, in this article, we present a depth estimation method that leverages rich representations learned from cascaded convolutional and fully connected neural networks operating on a patch-pooled set of feature maps. Furthermore, from this depth, we computationally reconstruct an all-focus image, i.e., removing the blur and achieve synthetic re-focusing, all from a single image. Our method is fast, and it substan tially improves depth accuracy over the state-of-the-art alternatives. Our proposed depth estimation approach can be utilized for everyday scenes without any geometric priors or extra information. Furthermore, our experiments on two benchmark datasets consist images of indoor and outdoor scenes, i.e., Make3D and NYU-v2 demonstrate superior performance in comparison with other available depth estimation state-of-the-art methods by reducing the root-mean-squared error by 57% and 46%, and state-of-the-art blur removal methods by 0.36 dB and 0.72 dB in PSNR, respectively. This improvement in-depth estimation and deblurring is further demonstrated by the superior performance using real defocus images against images captured with a prototype lens.

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