1-3hit |
Zijie WANG Qin LIU Takeshi IKENAGA
High-dynamic-range imaging (HDRI) technologies aim to extend the dynamic range of luminance against the limitation of camera sensors. Irradiance information of a scene can be reconstructed by fusing multiple low-dynamic-range (LDR) images with different exposures. The key issue is removing ghost artifacts caused by motion of moving objects and handheld cameras. This paper proposes a robust ghost-free HDRI algorithm by visual salience based bilateral motion detection and stack extension based exposure fusion. For ghost areas detection, visual salience is introduced to measure the differences between multiple images; bilateral motion detection is employed to improve the accuracy of labeling motion areas. For exposure fusion, the proposed algorithm reduces the discontinuity of brightness by stack extension and rejects the information of ghost areas to avoid artifacts via fusion masks. Experiment results show that the proposed algorithm can remove ghost artifacts accurately for both static and handheld cameras, remain robust to scenes with complex motion and keep low complexity over recent advances including rank minimization based method and patch based method by 63.6% and 20.4% time savings averagely.
Kosuke MARUYAMA Hiroshi KAMEDA
A ghost reduction algorithm for multiple angle sensors tracking objects under dual hypotheses is proposed. When multiple sensors and multiple objects exist on the same plane, the conventional method is unable to distinguish the real objects and ghosts from all possible pairs of measurement angle vectors. In order to resolve the issue stated above, the proposed algorithm utilizes tracking process considering dual hypotheses of real objects and ghosts behaviors. The proposed algorithm predicts dynamics of all the intersections of measurement angle vector pairs with the hypotheses of real objects and ghosts. Each hypothesis is evaluated by the residuals between prediction data and intersection. The appropriate hypothesis is extracted trough several data sampling. Representative simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithm.
Wim SCHOENMAKER Peter MEURIS Wim MAGNUS Bert MALESZKA
Recently, a new approach was presented to determine the high-frequency response of on-chip passives and interconnects. The method solves the electric scalar and magnetic vector potentials in a prescribed gauge. The latter one is included by introducing an additional independent scalar field, whose field equation needs to be solved. This additional field is a mathematical aid that allows for the construction of a gauge-conditioned, regular matrix representation of the curl-curl operator acting on edge elements. This paper reports on the convergence properties of the new method and shows the first results of this new calculation scheme for VLSI-based structures at high frequencies. The high-frequent behavior of the substrate current, the skin effect and current crowding is evaluated.