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Most compressive sensing (CS) reconstruction methods can be divided into two categories, i.e. model-based methods and classical deep network methods. By unfolding the iterative optimization algorithm for model-based methods onto networks, deep unfolding methods have the good interpretation of model-based methods and the high speed of classical deep network methods. In this paper, to solve the visual image CS problem, we propose a deep unfolding model dubbed AMP-Net. Rather than learning regularization terms, it is established by unfolding the iterative denoising process of the well-known approximate message passing algorithm. Furthermore, AMP-Net integrates deblocking modules in order to eliminate the blocking artifacts that usually appear in CS of visual images. In addition, the sampling matrix is jointly trained with other network parameters to enhance the reconstruction performance. Experimental results show that the proposed AMP-Net has better reconstruction accuracy than other state-of-the-art methods with high reconstruction speed and a small number of network parameters.
Incorporating deep neural networks in image compressive sensing (CS) receives intensive attentions recently. As deep network approaches learn the inverse mapping directly from the CS measurements, a number of models have to be trained, each of which
Compressed sensing (CS) is an efficient method to reconstruct MR image from small sampled data in $k$-space and accelerate the acquisition of MRI. In this work, we propose a novel deep geometric distillation network which combines the merits of model
Image denoising is the process of removing noise from noisy images, which is an image domain transferring task, i.e., from a single or several noise level domains to a photo-realistic domain. In this paper, we propose an effective image denoising met
Recent works that utilized deep models have achieved superior results in various image restoration applications. Such approach is typically supervised which requires a corpus of training images with distribution similar to the images to be recovered.
Snapshot compressive imaging (SCI) aims to record three-dimensional signals via a two-dimensional camera. For the sake of building a fast and accurate SCI recovery algorithm, we incorporate the interpretability of model-based methods and the speed of