Title
Real-Time False-Contours Removal for Inverse Tone Mapped HDR Content.
Abstract
High Dynamic Ranges (HDR) displays can show images with higher color contrast levels and peak luminosities than the commonly used Low Dynamic Range (LDR) displays. Although HDR displays are still expensive, they are reaching the consumer market in the coming years. Unfortunately, most video content is recorded and/or graded in LDR format. Typically, dynamic range expansion by using an Inverse Tone Mapped Operator (iTMO) is required to show LDR content in HDR displays. The most common type of artifact derived from dynamic range expansion is false contouring, which negatively affects the overall image quality. In this paper, we propose a new fast iterative false-contour removal method for inverse tone mapped HDR content. We consider the false-contour removal as a signal reconstruction problem, and we solve it using an iterative Projection Onto Convex Sets (POCS) minimization algorithm. Unlike most other false-contour removal techniques, we define reconstruction constraints taking into account the iTMO used. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method to remove false contours while preserving details in the image. In order speed-up the execution time, the proposed method was implemented to run on a GPU. We were able to show that it can be used to remove false contours in real-time from an inverse tone mapped High-definition HDR video sequences at 24 fps.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.1145/3123266.3123400
MM '17: ACM Multimedia Conference Mountain View California USA October, 2017
Field
DocType
ISBN
Inverse,Computer vision,Dynamic range,Computer science,Image quality,Regular polygon,Operator (computer programming),Artificial intelligence,Contouring,High-dynamic-range imaging,Signal reconstruction
Conference
978-1-4503-4906-2
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.36
1
Authors
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Gonzalo Luzardo1252.03
Jan Aelterman28011.46
Hiêp Quang Luong312313.04
W Philips44816.19
Daniel Ochoa5206.23