Lightweight High-Speed Photography Built on Coded Exposure and Implicit Neural Representation of Videos
This addresses the need for lightweight high-speed photography for low-capacity platforms, representing a novel hybrid approach.
The paper tackles the problem of recording high-speed scenes with high resolution using compact cameras by encoding a frame sequence into a blurry snapshot and retrieving the latent sharp video, achieving significant outperformance over existing methods in quality and flexibility.
The demand for compact cameras capable of recording high-speed scenes with high resolution is steadily increasing. However, achieving such capabilities often entails high bandwidth requirements, resulting in bulky, heavy systems unsuitable for low-capacity platforms. To address this challenge, leveraging a coded exposure setup to encode a frame sequence into a blurry snapshot and subsequently retrieve the latent sharp video presents a lightweight solution. Nevertheless, restoring motion from blur remains a formidable challenge due to the inherent ill-posedness of motion blur decomposition, the intrinsic ambiguity in motion direction, and the diverse motions present in natural videos. In this study, we propose a novel approach to address these challenges by combining the classical coded exposure imaging technique with the emerging implicit neural representation for videos. We strategically embed motion direction cues into the blurry image during the imaging process. Additionally, we develop a novel implicit neural representation based blur decomposition network to sequentially extract the latent video frames from the blurry image, leveraging the embedded motion direction cues. To validate the effectiveness and efficiency of our proposed framework, we conduct extensive experiments using benchmark datasets and real-captured blurry images. The results demonstrate that our approach significantly outperforms existing methods in terms of both quality and flexibility. The code for our work is available at .https://github.com/zhihongz/BDINR