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The existing segmentation techniques require high-fidelity images as input to perform semantic segmentation. Since the segmentation results contain most of edge information that is much less than the acquired images, the throughput gap leads to both hardware and software waste. In this letter, we report an image-free single-pixel segmentation technique. The technique combines structured illumination and single-pixel detection together, to efficiently samples and multiplexes scenes segmentation information into compressed one-dimensional measurements. The illumination patterns are optimized together with the subsequent reconstruction neural network, which directly infers segmentation maps from the single-pixel measurements. The end-to-end encoding-and-decoding learning framework enables optimized illumination with corresponding network, which provides both high acquisition and segmentation efficiency. Both simulation and experimental results validate that accurate segmentation can be achieved using two-order-of-magnitude less input data. When the sampling ratio is 1%, the Dice coefficient reaches above 80% and the pixel accuracy reaches above 96%. We envision that this image-free segmentation technique can be widely applied in various resource-limited platforms such as UAV and unmanned vehicle that require real-time sensing.
In order to increase signal-to-noise ratio in measurement, most imaging detectors sacrifice resolution to increase pixel size in confined area. Although the pixel super-resolution technique (PSR) enables resolution enhancement in such as digital holo graphic imaging, it suffers from unsatisfied reconstruction quality. In this work, we report a high-fidelity plug-and-play optimization method for PSR phase retrieval, termed as PNP-PSR. It decomposes PSR reconstruction into independent sub-problems based on the generalized alternating projection framework. An alternating projection operator and an enhancing neural network are derived to tackle the measurement fidelity and statistical prior regularization, respectively. In this way, PNP-PSR incorporates the advantages of individual operators, achieving both high efficiency and noise robustness. We compare PNP-PSR with the existing PSR phase retrieval algorithms with a series of simulations and experiments, and PNP-PSR outperforms the existing algorithms with as much as 11dB on PSNR. The enhanced imaging fidelity enables one-order-of-magnitude higher cell counting precision.
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