- Open Access
- Total Downloads : 366
- Authors : Aswathy S Raj, Reshmalakshmi C
- Paper ID : IJERTV4IS060728
- Volume & Issue : Volume 04, Issue 06 (June 2015)
- DOI : http://dx.doi.org/10.17577/IJERTV4IS060728
- Published (First Online): 23-06-2015
- ISSN (Online) : 2278-0181
- Publisher Name : IJERT
- License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Enhanced DCT Interpolation for better 2D Image Up-sampling
Aswathy S Raj
MTech Student, Department of ECE Marian Engineering College, Kazhakuttam, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India
Reshmalakshmi C
Assistant Professor, Department of ECE Marian Engineering College, Kazhakuttam, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India
Abstract– The up-sampling technique plays an important role in resolution enhancement. The conventional up- sampling techniques using interpolation cause undesirable blurring artifacts when a low resolution image is converted to its high resolution counterpart. The loss of high frequency information during up-sampling is the cause for these blurring artifacts. These artifacts deteriorate the signal quality which causes loss of fine details and edge information. This can be resolved by edge enhancing the low resolution image before up-sampling. In this paper, a hybrid DCT based up-sampling technique is used which incorporates DCT variance fusion and diffusion filtering to increase the information content and preserving the edges of the up- sampled image respectively. This method helps to restore the fine details and edge information in the reconstructed image, thus increases the quality of the up-sampled image. Experimental results show that there is significant improvement in the performance by using the proposed method in terms of PSNR and SSIM compared to the state-of art techniques for various test images.
Keywords– Image fusion, Diffusion filter, Image interpolation, Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT), Up-sampling, Interpolation filter.
-
INTRODUCTION
Image interpolation is the generation of a high resolution image from an input low resolution image. Image interpolation is widely used in 2D image processing. The interpolation processes have properties such as scalability, compatibility and restored image quality. Up-sampling or Interpolation of digital images can be used for providing additional information such as inspection and recognition of images. Image up-sampling plays a crucial role in medical imaging, satellite remote sensing where it is required to improve the resolution of the acquired image. Image interpolation aims at obtaining a high resolution image from the acquired low resolution image. Hence, image interpolation plays a crucial role in digital image processing. There is several interpolation techniques used for the up- sampling of images. One of the simplest interpolation techniques is the bilinear interpolation technique [1]. In this technique, the value of a new point is computed by the linear interpolation of the surrounding four pixels of the new point. It is simple and less complex but has undesirable blurring artifacts. Some of the commonly used interpolation techniques are Bicubic and B-Spline interpolation
techniques. These techniques consider sixteen neighboring
pixels to determine a new interpolated pixel value. They give a lesser degree of blurring compared to bilinear interpolation technique. Though
these interpolation techniques provide better performance and quality, they are computationally complex [2-5]. Lancoz is also a spatial domain interpolation technique. In this method, a sinc function is multiplied with a sinc window and scaled to be wider. It is truncated to zero outside a range[6]. It gives good result but it is slower than other approaches and reconstructed image has blurring artifacts.
There are many up-sampling techniques which are developed in the transform domain[7-9]. One of the techniques in the transform domain is the discrete cosine transform (DCT) based up-sampling [7]. This is implemented by padding zero coefficients to the high frequency side of the low resolution image. It gives very good result in terms of scalability and image quality. The DCT based up-sampling make use of the fact that the low resolution image preserves the low frequency DCT coefficients of the original high resolution image. It has good energy compatibility, so, the low frequency DCT coefficients contain the most important information. So, it provides better result than the conventional methods of interpolation. But, this technique results in undesirable blurring and ringing artifacts. Therefore, an efficient interpolation technique is required which have less amount of blurring and also improves the quality of the up-sampled image. The hybrid DCT-Weiner based interpolation method combines spatial interpolation and DCT interpolation [7]. It combines the advantages of both spatial domain and DCT domain interpolation techniques. The low resolution image has the low frequency information of the DCT. The performance of the proposed scheme mainly depends on the spatial domain approach. The spatial domain approach makes use of a 6-tap interpolation filter for up-sampling [10]. This method also suffers from blocking and ringing artifacts.
The method proposed in this paper describes a novel hybrid DCT based up-sampling technique which uses image fusion [11] and diffusion filtering [12] before up-sampling to eliminate ringing artifacts and enhance the edges. This method performs interpolation both in the spatial domain and the transform domain approach for up-sampling the image.
DCT Variance Fusion
The proposed method mainly consists of three steps. First step is DCT variance fusion [11], where the low resolution images undergo fusion to obtain the fused image. This helps to increase the information content of the image. Second step is diffusion filtering which is used to preserve the edges of the fused image. A non-linear anisotropic diffusion filter [12] is used which helps to reduce the edge artifacts. Final step is the hybrid DCT up-sampling which combines both the transform domain and spatial domain up- sampling using DCT up-sampling and interpolation filter respectively.
(d). Inverse level shifting
LR image
Diffusion Filtering
LR image
DCT
DCT
Coefficients.
6-tap Interpolation filter
-
PROPOSED METHOD
-
Overview
The low resolution input images are fused to obtain a single fused image to increase the information content of the low resolution image. It then undergoes diffusion filtering by passing it through a non-linear diffusion filter to enhance the edges of the fused image. It is then interpolated using the hybrid DCT- Weiner up-sampling technique. The proposed method is described in detail in this session.
Upsampled DCT Coefficients.
DCT
Zero Padding
High Resolution Image
IDCT
-
DCT Variance Fusion
The low resolution images are fused using the DCT variance fusion method [11]. This helps to increase the information content in the image. The algorithm is described as follows:
Algorithm
-
Get input image size (b). Level shifting
(c).Divide source images into 8*8 blocks and perform the fusion
-
Compute the 2-D DCT of 8*8 blocks
-
Calculate normalized transform coefficients
-
Mean value of 8*8 block of images (Measure for surrounding luminance)
-
Variance of 8*8 block of images
-
Perform Fusion
-
Compute the 2-D inverse DCT of 8*8 blocks and construct fused image
-
Fig. 1. Proposed Up-Sampling Method
-
-
Diffusion Filtering
Perona and Malik [12] proposed the nonlinear PDE for smoothing image on a continuous domain. Linear diffusion filtering is equivalent to convolving the original image with a Gaussian function, but, in diffusion filtering edges remain well localized and can even be enhanced.
-
6 tap Interpolation filter
The interpolation filter performs the row-wise and column-wise interpolation of the input image to obtain the up sampled image [10]. The input image is resized by adding the filter coefficients in the alternate rows and columns when passing through the interpolation filter.
-
DCT Up-sampling
In DCT domain, up-sampling [7] is done by adding N zeros in the high frequency regions, where N is the signal length. Then, the two fold up-sampled data is obtained by performing type-II IDCT of the extended 2N samples. The steps include:
-
Obtain the 2D- DCT of the N *N image
-
Zero padding to obtain 2N*2N samples
-
Obtain the IDCT of the 2N*2N samples.
-
-
-
EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
The performance of the proposed method is compared with the existing techniques. To, demonstrate this; the input image is down sampled by a factor 2 in the spatial domain. The image is interpolated back to the original size by using each of the interpolation schemes. The methods are compared using different quality
assessment parameters. The experimental results show that the proposed hybrid interpolation technique gives better performance compared to spatial domain and DCT interpolation techniques in terms of objective and subjective image quality. The experiment is conducted for both gray scale and color images.
Table I illustrates the PSNR (dB) comparison of various existing techniques such as, bicubic, DCT, and hybrid method with the proposed interpolation technique. The experimental results show that the proposed algorithm provides a considerable PSNR improvement in comparison to the existing techniques. Also, in Table II and Table III the performance analysis is done in terms of SSIM and VIF parameters. Figure 2 gives the plot of PSNR value for different methods for various test images.
Figure 3 illustrates the results of various up-sampling schemes for subjective evaluation for gray scale images. Experimental results show, the blurring is much reduced and the edges are enhanced with fine detail preservation in comparison to other existing interpolation techniques. Thus, the proposed method yields considerably better subjective performance than DCT and other techniques.
The experiment is repeated for color images also. Table IV, V and IV gives the comparison of PSNR, SSIM and VIF for color images respectively. Fig.4. gives the corresponding PSNR plot for different schemes for color images. Fig.5. gives the results of various up-sampling schemes performed on color images. In this experiment, a low resolution input image of size 128 128 is up-sampled by a factor 2 to obtain a high resolution image of size 256
Table I. Comparison of Peak Signal to Noise Ratio (PSNR) (dB) for gray scale images
Input images
PSNR(dB)
Bicubic
DCT
Hybrid
Proposed
Lena
29.9968
32.0564
37.8236
40.0146
Barbara
28.3402
30.1834
37.6784
39.8485
Boat
27.7294
28.8809
35.7951
38.0229
Table II. Comparison of Structural Similarity Index (SSIM) for gray scale images
Input images
SSIM
Bicubic
DCT
Hybrid
Proposed
Lena
0.8934
0.9160
0.9784
0.9793
Barbara
0.8272
0.8525
0.9813
0.9819
Boat
0.8177
0.8450
0.9648
0.9667
Table III. Comparison of Visual Index Fidelity (VIF) for gray scale images
Fig.2. PSNR plot for various schemes corresponding to different gray scale images.
(a)
(b)
Input images
VIF
Bicubic
DCT
Hybrid
Proposed
Lena
0.5522
0.6443
0.8392
0.8398
Barbara
0.5071
0.5868
0.8554
0.8562
Boat
0.4454
0.4971
0.7780
0.7804
(c)
(d)
(e)
Fig.3. (a)Original low resolution image; (b)Bicubic Interpolation; (c)DCT Up-sampling; (d)Hybrid DCT Up-sampling; (e)Proposed Method for gray scale image
Table IV. Comparison of Peak Signal to Noise Ratio (PSNR) (dB) for color images
Input images
PSNR(dB)
Bicubic
DCT
Hybrid
Proposed
Baboon
22.1161
26.2366
26.9995
27.2802
Lena
23.2689
30.1262
32.1416
33.1636
Peppers
23.3440
30.2076
32.6323
33.7606
Table V. Comparison of Structural Similarity Index (SSIM) for color images
Input images
SSIM
Bicubic
DCT
Hybrid
Proposed
Baboon
0.6744
0.7707
0.7767
0.7768
Lena
0.8847
0.9278
0.9442
0.9252
Peppers
0.9168
0.9403
0.9258
0.9436
Table IV. Comparison of Visual Index Fidelity (VIF) for color images
Input images
VIF
Bicubic
DCT
Hybrid
Proposed
Baboon
0.9410
0.9648
0.9767
0.9849
Lena
0.9444
0.9716
0.9821
0.9900
Peppers
0.9464
0.9703
0.9799
0.9878
Fig.4. PSNR plot for various schemes corresponding to different color images.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
Fig:5. (a)Original low resolution image; (b)Bicubic Interpolation; (c)DCT Upsampling; (d)Hybrid DCT Upsampling; (e)Proposed Method for color image.
-
CONCLUSION
In this paper, an improved hybrid DCT based up- sampling technique is proposed. Most of the existing image up-sampling techniques produce blurring artifacts which is due to the loss of fine details in the up-sampled image. The proposed method helps to increase the information content and preserve the fine details of the image. Hence, it helps to improve the signal quality.
REFERENCES
-
Lu Jing, Xiong Si, Wu Shihong, An improved bilinear interpolation algorithm of converting standard defination images to high definition images, WASE Int. Conf. on Info. Engg. pp.441 444, 2009.
-
R. G. Keys, Cubic convolution interpolation for digital image processing, IEEE Trans. Acoust., speech, signal Process., vol. ASSP- 29, no.6, pp.1153-1160, Dec.1981.
-
S. E. Reichenach and F.Geng, Two dimensional cubic convolution, IEEE Trans. Image Process., vol.12, no.8, pp.857-865, Aug. 2003.
-
Zhou Dengwen, An edge directed bicubic interpolation algorithm, CISP, pp.1186-1189, 2010.
-
H. S. Hou and H. C. Andrews, Cubic splines for image interpolation and digital filtering IEEE Trans. Acoust., speech and sign. Proc., vol. ASSP-26, 1978.
-
Wenxing Ye, Alireza Entezari, A geometric construction of multivariate sinc functions, IEEE Transaction on Image processing 2011; 19(12).
-
R. Dugad and N. Ahuja, A fast scheme for image size change in the compressed domain, IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. Video Technol., vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 461474, Apr. 2001.
-
J. Mukherjee and S.K. Mitra, "Image resizing in the compressed domain using subband DCT," IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. Video Technol. , vol.12, no.7, pp.620-627, Jul 2002
-
H. W. Park, Y. S. Park, and S. K. Oh, L/M-fold image resizing in block-DCT domain using symmetric convolution,IEEE Trans. Image Process., vol. 12, no. 9, pp. 10161034, Sep. 2003.
-
Y. Vatis and J. Ostermann, Adaptive interpolation filter for H.264/AVC, IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. Video Technol., vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 179192, Feb. 2009.