CVMMMay 10, 2023

Computational Optics for Mobile Terminals in Mass Production

arXiv:2305.05886v129 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of optical degradation in mobile terminals for mass production, offering a novel integration of optical design and post-processing, though it appears incremental in improving existing computational photography methods.

The paper tackles the challenge of correcting optical aberrations and manufacturing deviations in mass-produced mobile cameras by constructing a perturbed lens system model and proposing an optimization framework to create proxy cameras, with a dilated Omni-dimensional dynamic convolution method achieving perfect computational photography by adapting to manufacturing variations.

Correcting the optical aberrations and the manufacturing deviations of cameras is a challenging task. Due to the limitation on volume and the demand for mass production, existing mobile terminals cannot rectify optical degradation. In this work, we systematically construct the perturbed lens system model to illustrate the relationship between the deviated system parameters and the spatial frequency response measured from photographs. To further address this issue, an optimization framework is proposed based on this model to build proxy cameras from the machining samples' SFRs. Engaging with the proxy cameras, we synthetic data pairs, which encode the optical aberrations and the random manufacturing biases, for training the learning-based algorithms. In correcting aberration, although promising results have been shown recently with convolutional neural networks, they are hard to generalize to stochastic machining biases. Therefore, we propose a dilated Omni-dimensional dynamic convolution and implement it in post-processing to account for the manufacturing degradation. Extensive experiments which evaluate multiple samples of two representative devices demonstrate that the proposed optimization framework accurately constructs the proxy camera. And the dynamic processing model is well-adapted to manufacturing deviations of different cameras, realizing perfect computational photography. The evaluation shows that the proposed method bridges the gap between optical design, system machining, and post-processing pipeline, shedding light on the joint of image signal reception (lens and sensor) and image signal processing.

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