IVCVJul 4, 2020

Deep Bilateral Retinex for Low-Light Image Enhancement

arXiv:2007.02018v117 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of poor visibility in low-light images for computer vision applications, representing an incremental improvement with a focus on noise handling.

The paper tackled low-light image enhancement by proposing a deep learning method based on Retinex decomposition to handle significant and spatially-varying measurement noise, achieving competitive results on benchmark datasets with particular advantage in extremely low-light conditions.

Low-light images, i.e. the images captured in low-light conditions, suffer from very poor visibility caused by low contrast, color distortion and significant measurement noise. Low-light image enhancement is about improving the visibility of low-light images. As the measurement noise in low-light images is usually significant yet complex with spatially-varying characteristic, how to handle the noise effectively is an important yet challenging problem in low-light image enhancement. Based on the Retinex decomposition of natural images, this paper proposes a deep learning method for low-light image enhancement with a particular focus on handling the measurement noise. The basic idea is to train a neural network to generate a set of pixel-wise operators for simultaneously predicting the noise and the illumination layer, where the operators are defined in the bilateral space. Such an integrated approach allows us to have an accurate prediction of the reflectance layer in the presence of significant spatially-varying measurement noise. Extensive experiments on several benchmark datasets have shown that the proposed method is very competitive to the state-of-the-art methods, and has significant advantage over others when processing images captured in extremely low lighting conditions.

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