PH.D DEFENCE - PUBLIC SEMINAR

Separating Layers in Images and Its Applications

Speaker
Mr Li Yu
Advisor
Dr Michael Brown, Associate Professor, School of Computing


14 Oct 2015 Wednesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

MR1, COM1-03-19

Abstract:

Image layer separation refers to one series of problems that try to decouple the input image into different component layers. While it has many practical applications, it is very challenging to solve due to its ill-posedness nature. Usually additional information and assumptions are required to make the problem tractable. In this thesis we focus on three types of specific layer separation problems -- reflection separation, intrinsic images decomposition, and haze removal. We try to find our solutions to these problems by using different information or imposing new constraints.

In the presentation, We will first describe our approach for reflection removal, by using a small set of input image captured from different viewpoints. Next a layer separation method for single image input will be presented with application to both reflection removal and intrinsic images estimation. The third work targets on the specific problem of recovering the visibility in nighttime haze scene. Besides these three layer separation works we will also describe an application of layer separation that aims to remove compression artifacts raised in image contrast boosting. In all four works, our solutions show excellent performance in experimental results that are either on par with or superior to the current state-of-the-art. A summary will be given to summarize our contributions with potential future directions being presented.