Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4968783 | Computer Vision and Image Understanding | 2017 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Numerous single-image super-resolution algorithms have been proposed in the literature, but few studies address the problem of performance evaluation based on visual perception. While most super-resolution images are evaluated by full-reference metrics, the effectiveness is not clear and the required ground-truth images are not always available in practice. To address these problems, we conduct human subject studies using a large set of super-resolution images and propose a no-reference metric learned from visual perceptual scores. Specifically, we design three types of low-level statistical features in both spatial and frequency domains to quantify super-resolved artifacts, and learn a two-stage regression model to predict the quality scores of super-resolution images without referring to ground-truth images. Extensive experimental results show that the proposed metric is effective and efficient to assess the quality of super-resolution images based on human perception.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Authors
Chao Ma, Chih-Yuan Yang, Xiaokang Yang, Ming-Hsuan Yang,