CVApr 27, 2016

Graph Laplacian Regularization for Image Denoising: Analysis in the Continuous Domain

arXiv:1604.07948v247 citations
AI Analysis

This provides theoretical insights for researchers in inverse imaging problems, though it is incremental as it builds on existing graph Laplacian methods.

The paper tackled the lack of theoretical understanding of graph Laplacian regularization in image denoising by analyzing it in the continuous domain, showing it converges to a functional with a locally adaptive metric and interpreting it as anisotropic diffusion, with experiments demonstrating competitive performance against BM3D for natural images and significant outperformance for piecewise smooth images.

Inverse imaging problems are inherently under-determined, and hence it is important to employ appropriate image priors for regularization. One recent popular prior---the graph Laplacian regularizer---assumes that the target pixel patch is smooth with respect to an appropriately chosen graph. However, the mechanisms and implications of imposing the graph Laplacian regularizer on the original inverse problem are not well understood. To address this problem, in this paper we interpret neighborhood graphs of pixel patches as discrete counterparts of Riemannian manifolds and perform analysis in the continuous domain, providing insights into several fundamental aspects of graph Laplacian regularization for image denoising. Specifically, we first show the convergence of the graph Laplacian regularizer to a continuous-domain functional, integrating a norm measured in a locally adaptive metric space. Focusing on image denoising, we derive an optimal metric space assuming non-local self-similarity of pixel patches, leading to an optimal graph Laplacian regularizer for denoising in the discrete domain. We then interpret graph Laplacian regularization as an anisotropic diffusion scheme to explain its behavior during iterations, e.g., its tendency to promote piecewise smooth signals under certain settings. To verify our analysis, an iterative image denoising algorithm is developed. Experimental results show that our algorithm performs competitively with state-of-the-art denoising methods such as BM3D for natural images, and outperforms them significantly for piecewise smooth images.

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