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Image dehazing from the perspective of environmental illumination/ Sanchayan Santra

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Kolkata: Indian Statistical Institute, 2019Description: 105 pagesSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23 621.367 Sa 231
Online resources:
Contents:
Variable environmental illumination intensity -- Variable environmental illumination intensity and color -- Supervised estimation of transmittance and environmental illumination using CNN -- Supervised estimation of transmittance and airlight using FCN -- Dehazing based on patch quality comparator
Production credits:
  • Guided by Prof. Bhabatosh Chanda
Dissertation note: Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indian Statistical Institute, 2019 Summary: Haze and fog are atmospheric phenomena where the particles suspended in the air obscure visibility by scattering the light propagating through the atmosphere. As a result only a part of the reflected light reaches the observer. So, the apparent intensity of the objects get reduced. Apart from that, the in-scatter of the atmospheric light creates a translucent veil, which is a common sight during haze. Image dehazing methods try to recover a haze-free version of a given image by removing the effects of haze. Although attempts have been made to accurately estimate the scene transmittance, the estimation of environmental illumination has largely been ignored. Only a few methods have been proposed for its estimation and the only the recently proposed methods have considered to estimate this when proposing an end-to-end method. So, that methods that we propose here mainly motivated by the how we can estimate the environmental illumination under different settings. We start with relaxing the haze imaging model to account for the situations when the sky is not cloudy. Normally during fog and haze the sky remains cloudy. As a result the entire scene receives the same amount of light. But the sky may not always remain cloudy when a scene is being photographed in haze or fog condition. If we only consider daytime scenes, the direct sunlight plays a role in the illumination when the sky is clear. But, when this happens, the scene receives different amount of light in different portion of the image. The imaging model is relaxed to capture this situation. The method that is proposed here is based on the color line based dehazing, extended to work under this relaxed model. Since, the proposed relaxation is done with the assumption of daytime scenes, this model is not applicable for night-time scenes. So, in the next chapter, the imaging model is further relaxed to include the night-time haze situations. This is done by allowing the environmental illumination to vary spatially within the image. But this introduces a challenge. Given a hazy image the color and even the number of different illuminants present in the scene is not known. Moreover it can vary across the scene, especially in the night-time images. We have shown the construct of color line based dehazing to estimate both the possible illuminants present in the scene and the patches they affect, by the simple technique to Hough Transform. This has enable us to propose a method that works for both day and night-time image.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
THESIS ISI Library, Kolkata 621.367 Sa 231 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available E-Thesis TH492
Total holds: 0

Thesis (Ph.D.) - Indian Statistical Institute, 2019

Includes bibliography

Variable environmental illumination intensity -- Variable environmental illumination intensity and color -- Supervised estimation of transmittance and environmental illumination using CNN -- Supervised estimation of transmittance and airlight using FCN -- Dehazing based on patch quality comparator

Guided by Prof. Bhabatosh Chanda

Haze and fog are atmospheric phenomena where the particles suspended in the air obscure visibility by scattering the light propagating through the atmosphere. As a result only a part of the reflected light reaches the observer. So, the apparent intensity of the objects get reduced. Apart from that, the in-scatter of the atmospheric light creates a translucent veil, which is a common sight during haze. Image dehazing methods try to recover a haze-free version of a given image by removing the effects of haze. Although attempts have been made to accurately estimate the scene transmittance, the estimation of environmental illumination has largely been ignored. Only a few methods have been proposed for its estimation and the only the recently proposed methods have considered to estimate this when proposing an end-to-end method. So, that methods that we propose here mainly motivated by the how we can estimate the environmental illumination under different settings. We start with relaxing the haze imaging model to account for the situations when the sky is not cloudy. Normally during fog and haze the sky remains cloudy. As a result the entire scene receives the same amount of light. But the sky may not always remain cloudy when a scene is being photographed in haze or fog condition. If we only consider daytime scenes, the direct sunlight plays a role in the illumination when the sky is clear. But, when this happens, the scene receives different amount of light in different portion of the image. The imaging model is relaxed to capture this situation. The method that is proposed here is based on the color line based dehazing, extended to work under this relaxed model. Since, the proposed relaxation is done with the assumption of daytime scenes, this model is not applicable for night-time scenes. So, in the next chapter, the imaging model is further relaxed to include the night-time haze situations. This is done by allowing the environmental illumination to vary spatially within the image. But this introduces a challenge. Given a hazy image the color and even the number of different illuminants present in the scene is not known. Moreover it can vary across the scene, especially in the night-time images. We have shown the construct of color line based dehazing to estimate both the possible illuminants present in the scene and the patches they affect, by the simple technique to Hough Transform. This has enable us to propose a method that works for both day and night-time image.

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