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As the immersive multimedia techniques like Free-viewpoint TV (FTV) develop at an astonishing rate, users demand for high-quality immersive contents increases dramatically. Unlike traditional uniform artifacts, the distortions within immersive contents could be non-uniform structure-related and thus are challenging for commonly used quality metrics. Recent studies have demonstrated that the representation of visual features can be extracted from multiple levels of the hierarchy. Inspired by the hierarchical representation mechanism in the human visual system (HVS), in this paper, we explore to adopt structural representations to quantitatively measure the impact of such structure-related distortion on perceived quality in FTV scenario. More specifically, a bio-inspired full reference image quality metric is proposed based on 1) low-level contour descriptor; 2) mid-level contour category descriptor; and 3) task-oriented non-natural structure descriptor. The experimental results show that the proposed model outperforms significantly the state-of-the-art metrics.
This paper reports on the NTIRE 2021 challenge on perceptual image quality assessment (IQA), held in conjunction with the New Trends in Image Restoration and Enhancement workshop (NTIRE) workshop at CVPR 2021. As a new type of image processing techno
Recently, image quality assessment (IQA) has achieved remarkable progress with the success of deep learning. However, the strict pre-condition of full-reference (FR) methods has limited its application in real scenarios. And the no-reference (NR) sch
Image quality assessment is critical to control and maintain the perceived quality of visual content. Both subjective and objective evaluations can be utilised, however, subjective image quality assessment is currently considered the most reliable ap
Image quality assessment (IQA) is the key factor for the fast development of image restoration (IR) algorithms. The most recent IR methods based on Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) have achieved significant improvement in visual performance, bu
This paper describes a quality assessment model for perceptual video compression applications (PVM), which stimulates visual masking and distortion-artefact perception using an adaptive combination of noticeable distortions and blurring artefacts. Th