Restoring Vision in Hazy Weather with Hierarchical Contrastive Learning
This work addresses image restoration in hazy weather for computer vision applications, representing an incremental improvement over existing deep learning methods.
The paper tackles single image dehazing by proposing Hierarchical Contrastive Dehazing (HCD), which uses a hierarchical network and contrastive loss to improve feature exploitation, resulting in state-of-the-art performance on public datasets with higher PSNR and SSIM scores.
Image restoration under hazy weather condition, which is called single image dehazing, has been of significant interest for various computer vision applications. In recent years, deep learning-based methods have achieved success. However, existing image dehazing methods typically neglect the hierarchy of features in the neural network and fail to exploit their relationships fully. To this end, we propose an effective image dehazing method named Hierarchical Contrastive Dehazing (HCD), which is based on feature fusion and contrastive learning strategies. HCD consists of a hierarchical dehazing network (HDN) and a novel hierarchical contrastive loss (HCL). Specifically, the core design in the HDN is a hierarchical interaction module, which utilizes multi-scale activation to revise the feature responses hierarchically. To cooperate with the training of HDN, we propose HCL which performs contrastive learning on hierarchically paired exemplars, facilitating haze removal. Extensive experiments on public datasets, RESIDE, HazeRD, and DENSE-HAZE, demonstrate that HCD quantitatively outperforms the state-of-the-art methods in terms of PSNR, SSIM and achieves better visual quality.