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Binocular Tone Mapping with Improved Overall Contrast and Local Details

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 Added by Zhuming Zhang
 Publication date 2018
and research's language is English




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Tone mapping is a commonly used technique that maps the set of colors in high-dynamic-range (HDR) images to another set of colors in low-dynamic-range (LDR) images, to fit the need for print-outs, LCD monitors and projectors. Unfortunately, during the compression of dynamic range, the overall contrast and local details generally cannot be preserved simultaneously. Recently, with the increased use of stereoscopic devices, the notion of binocular tone mapping has been proposed in the existing research study. However, the existing research lacks the binocular perception study and is unable to generate the optimal binocular pair that presents the most visual content. In this paper, we propose a novel perception-based binocular tone mapping method, that can generate an optimal binocular image pair (generating left and right images simultaneously) from an HDR image that presents the most visual content by designing a binocular perception metric. Our method outperforms the existing method in terms of both visual and time performance.

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Tone-mapping plays an essential role in high dynamic range (HDR) imaging. It aims to preserve visual information of HDR images in a medium with a limited dynamic range. Although many works have been proposed to provide tone-mapped results from HDR images, most of them can only perform tone-mapping in a single pre-designed way. However, the subjectivity of tone-mapping quality varies from person to person, and the preference of tone-mapping style also differs from application to application. In this paper, a learning-based multimodal tone-mapping method is proposed, which not only achieves excellent visual quality but also explores the style diversity. Based on the framework of BicycleGAN, the proposed method can provide a variety of expert-level tone-mapped results by manipulating different latent codes. Finally, we show that the proposed method performs favorably against state-of-the-art tone-mapping algorithms both quantitatively and qualitatively.
In this paper, we present a novel tone mapping algorithm that can be used for displaying wide dynamic range (WDR) images on low dynamic range (LDR) devices. The proposed algorithm is mainly motivated by the logarithmic response and local adaptation features of the human visual system (HVS). HVS perceives luminance differently when under different adaptation levels, and therefore our algorithm uses functions built upon different scales to tone map pixels to different values. Functions of large scales are used to maintain image brightness consistency and functions of small scales are used to preserve local detail and contrast. An efficient method using local variance has been proposed to fuse the values of different scales and to remove artifacts. The algorithm utilizes integral images and integral histograms to reduce computation complexity and processing time. Experimental results show that the proposed algorithm can generate high brightness, good contrast, and appealing images that surpass the performance of many state-of-the-art tone mapping algorithms. This project is available at https://github.com/jieyang1987/ToneMapping-Based-on-Multi-scale-Histogram-Synthesis.
We describe a deep high-dynamic-range (HDR) image tone mapping operator that is computationally efficient and perceptually optimized. We first decompose an HDR image into a normalized Laplacian pyramid, and use two deep neural networks (DNNs) to estimate the Laplacian pyramid of the desired tone-mapped image from the normalized representation. We then end-to-end optimize the entire method over a database of HDR images by minimizing the normalized Laplacian pyramid distance (NLPD), a recently proposed perceptual metric. Qualitative and quantitative experiments demonstrate that our method produces images with better visual quality, and runs the fastest among existing local tone mapping algorithms.
146 - Jie Yang , Ziyi Liu , Mengchen Lin 2021
Wide dynamic range (WDR) images contain more scene details and contrast when compared to common images. However, it requires tone mapping to process the pixel values in order to display properly. The details of WDR images can diminish during the tone mapping process. In this work, we address the problem by combining a novel reformulated Laplacian pyramid and deep learning. The reformulated Laplacian pyramid always decompose a WDR image into two frequency bands where the low-frequency band is global feature-oriented, and the high-frequency band is local feature-oriented. The reformulation preserves the local features in its original resolution and condenses the global features into a low-resolution image. The generated frequency bands are reconstructed and fine-tuned to output the final tone mapped image that can display on the screen with minimum detail and contrast loss. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method outperforms state-of-the-art WDR image tone mapping methods. The code is made publicly available at https://github.com/linmc86/Deep-Reformulated-Laplacian-Tone-Mapping.
Single-image HDR reconstruction or inverse tone mapping (iTM) is a challenging task. In particular, recovering information in over-exposed regions is extremely difficult because details in such regions are almost completely lost. In this paper, we present a deep learning based iTM method that takes advantage of the feature extraction and mapping power of deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and uses a lightness prior to modulate the CNN to better exploit observations in the surrounding areas of the over-exposed regions to enhance the quality of HDR image reconstruction. Specifically, we introduce a Hierarchical Synthesis Network (HiSN) for inferring a HDR image from a LDR input and a Lightness Adpative Modulation Network (LAMN) to incorporate the the lightness prior knowledge in the inferring process. The HiSN hierarchically synthesizes the high-brightness component and the low-brightness component of the HDR image whilst the LAMN uses a lightness adaptive mask that separates detail-less saturated bright pixels from well-exposed lower light pixels to enable HiSN to better infer the missing information, particularly in the difficult over-exposed detail-less areas. We present experimental results to demonstrate the effectiveness of the new technique based on quantitative measures and visual comparisons. In addition, we present ablation studies of HiSN and visualization of the activation maps inside LAMN to help gain a deeper understanding of the internal working of the new iTM algorithm and explain why it can achieve much improved performance over state-of-the-art algorithms.
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