IVCVITSPOct 31, 2024

Blind Time-of-Flight Imaging: Sparse Deconvolution on the Continuum with Unknown Kernels

arXiv:2411.00893v16 citationsh-index: 5Siam J Imaging Sci
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a bottleneck in computational imaging for applications such as 3D and non-line-of-sight imaging, offering a more flexible and robust approach, though it is incremental as it builds on existing sparse deconvolution methods.

The paper tackles the problem of Time-of-Flight imaging without requiring kernel calibration, introducing a blind technique that recovers sparse spikes on a continuum. It demonstrates performance comparable to traditional methods with known kernels, facilitating super-resolution in challenging scenarios like distinguishing closely spaced objects.

In recent years, computational Time-of-Flight (ToF) imaging has emerged as an exciting and a novel imaging modality that offers new and powerful interpretations of natural scenes, with applications extending to 3D, light-in-flight, and non-line-of-sight imaging. Mathematically, ToF imaging relies on algorithmic super-resolution, as the back-scattered sparse light echoes lie on a finer time resolution than what digital devices can capture. Traditional methods necessitate knowledge of the emitted light pulses or kernels and employ sparse deconvolution to recover scenes. Unlike previous approaches, this paper introduces a novel, blind ToF imaging technique that does not require kernel calibration and recovers sparse spikes on a continuum, rather than a discrete grid. By studying the shared characteristics of various ToF modalities, we capitalize on the fact that most physical pulses approximately satisfy the Strang-Fix conditions from approximation theory. This leads to a new mathematical formulation for sparse super-resolution. Our recovery approach uses an optimization method that is pivoted on an alternating minimization strategy. We benchmark our blind ToF method against traditional kernel calibration methods, which serve as the baseline. Extensive hardware experiments across different ToF modalities demonstrate the algorithmic advantages, flexibility and empirical robustness of our approach. We show that our work facilitates super-resolution in scenarios where distinguishing between closely spaced objects is challenging, while maintaining performance comparable to known kernel situations. Examples of light-in-flight imaging and light-sweep videos highlight the practical benefits of our blind super-resolution method in enhancing the understanding of natural scenes.

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