Compressed Sensing in the Presence of Speckle Noise

Speckle or multiplicative noise is a critical issue in coherence-based imaging systems, such as synthetic aperture radar and optical coherence tomography. Existence of speckle noise considerably limits the applicability of such systems by degrading their performance. On the other hand, the sophistic...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on information theory 2022-10, Vol.68 (10), p.6964-6980
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Wenda, Jalali, Shirin, Maleki, Arian
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Speckle or multiplicative noise is a critical issue in coherence-based imaging systems, such as synthetic aperture radar and optical coherence tomography. Existence of speckle noise considerably limits the applicability of such systems by degrading their performance. On the other hand, the sophistications that arise in the study of multiplicative noise have so far impeded theoretical analysis of such imaging systems. As a result, the current acquisition technology relies on heuristic solutions, such as oversampling the signal and converting the problem into a denoising problem with multiplicative noise. This paper attempts to bridge the gap between theory and practice by providing the first theoretical analysis of such systems. To achieve this goal the log-likelihood function corresponding to measurement systems with speckle noise is characterized. Then employing compression codes to model the source structure, for the case of under-sampled measurements, a compression-based maximum likelihood recovery method is proposed. The mean squared error (MSE) performance of the proposed method is characterized and is shown to scale as O\left({\sqrt {\frac{k \log n }{ m}}}\right) , where k , m and n denote the intrinsic dimension of the signal class according to the compression code, the number of observations, and the ambient dimension of the signal, respectively. This result, while in contrast to imaging systems with additive noise in which MSE scales as O\left({{\frac{k \log n }{ m}}}\right) , suggests that if the signal class is structured (i.e., k \ll n ), accurate recovery of a signal from under-determined measurements is still feasible, even in the presence of speckle noise. Simulation results are presented that suggest image recovery under multiplicative noise is inherently more challenging than additive noise, and that the derived theoretical results are sharp.
ISSN:0018-9448
1557-9654
DOI:10.1109/TIT.2022.3178658