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Measuring the Global Phase Coherence of an image

48

Citations

10

References

2008

Year

Abstract

The Fourier phase spectrum of an image is well known to contain crucial information about the image geometry, in particular its contours. In this paper, we show that it is also strongly related to the image quality, in particular its sharpness. We propose a way to define the Global Phase Coherence (GPC) of an image, by comparing the likelihood of the image to the likelihood of all possible images sharing the same Fourier power spectrum. The likelihood is measured with the total variation (Rudin-Osher-Fatemi implicit prior), and the numerical estimation is realized by a Monte-Carlo simulation. We show that the obtained GPC measure decreases with blur, noise, and ringing, and thus provides a new interesting sharpness indicator, that can be used for parametric blind deconvolution, as demonstrated by experiments.

References

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