Perceptually Unimportant Information Reduction and Cosine Similarity-Based Quality Assessment of 3D-Synthesized Images

Quality assessment of 3D-synthesized images has traditionally been based on detecting specific categories of distortions such as stretching, black-holes, blurring, etc. However, such approaches have limitations in accurately detecting distortions entirely in 3D synthesized images affecting their per...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on image processing 2022, Vol.31, p.2027-2039
Hauptverfasser: Sadbhawna, Jakhetiya, Vinit, Chaudhary, Shubham, Subudhi, Badri Narayan, Lin, Weisi, Guntuku, Sharath Chandra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Quality assessment of 3D-synthesized images has traditionally been based on detecting specific categories of distortions such as stretching, black-holes, blurring, etc. However, such approaches have limitations in accurately detecting distortions entirely in 3D synthesized images affecting their performance. This work proposes an algorithm to efficiently detect the distortions and subsequently evaluate the perceptual quality of 3D synthesized images. The process of generation of 3D synthesized images produces a few pixel shift between reference and 3D synthesized image, and hence they are not properly aligned with each other. To address this, we propose using morphological operation (opening) in the residual image to reduce perceptually unimportant information between the reference and the distorted 3D synthesized image. The residual image suppresses the perceptually unimportant information and highlights the geometric distortions which significantly affect the overall quality of 3D synthesized images. We utilized the information present in the residual image to quantify the perceptual quality measure and named this algorithm as Perceptually Unimportant Information Reduction (PU-IR) algorithm. At the same time, the residual image cannot capture the minor structural and geometric distortions due to the usage of erosion operation. To address this, we extract the perceptually important deep features from the pre-trained VGG-16 architectures on the Laplacian pyramid. The distortions in 3D synthesized images are present in patches, and the human visual system perceives even the small levels of these distortions. With this view, to compare these deep features between reference and distorted image, we propose using cosine similarity and named this algorithm as Deep Features extraction and comparison using Cosine Similarity (DF-CS) algorithm. The cosine similarity is based upon their similarity rather than computing the magnitude of the difference of deep features. Finally, the pooling is done to obtain the objective quality scores using simple multiplication to both PU-IR and DF-CS algorithms. Our source code is available online: https://github.com/sadbhawnathakur/3D-Image-Quality-Assessment .
ISSN:1057-7149
1941-0042
DOI:10.1109/TIP.2022.3147981