1 April 2011 Color demosaicking by local directional interpolation and nonlocal adaptive thresholding
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Single sensor digital color cameras capture only one of the three primary colors at each pixel and a process called color demosaicking (CDM) is used to reconstruct the full color images. Most CDM algorithms assume the existence of high local spectral redundancy in estimating the missing color samples. However, for images with sharp color transitions and high color saturation, such an assumption may be invalid and visually unpleasant CDM errors will occur. In this paper, we exploit the image nonlocal redundancy to improve the local color reproduction result. First, multiple local directional estimates of a missing color sample are computed and fused according to local gradients. Then, nonlocal pixels similar to the estimated pixel are searched to enhance the local estimate. An adaptive thresholding method rather than the commonly used nonlocal means filtering is proposed to improve the local estimate. This allows the final reconstruction to be performed at the structural level as opposed to the pixel level. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed local directional interpolation and nonlocal adaptive thresholding method outperforms many state-of-the-art CDM methods in reconstructing the edges and reducing color interpolation artifacts, leading to higher visual quality of reproduced color images.
©(2011) Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Lei Zhang, Xiaolin Wu, Antoni Buades, and Xin Li "Color demosaicking by local directional interpolation and nonlocal adaptive thresholding," Journal of Electronic Imaging 20(2), 023016 (1 April 2011). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3600632
Published: 1 April 2011
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 331 scholarly publications and 14 patents.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Code division multiplexing

Color difference

Error analysis

Statistical analysis

Colorimetry

Digital filtering

Visualization

RELATED CONTENT


Back to Top