scholarly journals Upsampling Real-Time, Low-Resolution CCTV Videos Using Generative Adversarial Networks

Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 1312
Author(s):  
Debapriya Hazra ◽  
Yung-Cheol Byun

Video super-resolution has become an emerging topic in the field of machine learning. The generative adversarial network is a framework that is widely used to develop solutions for low-resolution videos. Video surveillance using closed-circuit television (CCTV) is significant in every field, all over the world. A common problem with CCTV videos is sudden video loss or poor quality. In this paper, we propose a generative adversarial network that implements spatio-temporal generators and discriminators to enhance real-time low-resolution CCTV videos to high-resolution. The proposed model considers both foreground and background motion of a CCTV video and effectively models the spatial and temporal consistency from low-resolution video frames to generate high-resolution videos. Quantitative and qualitative experiments on benchmark datasets, including Kinetics-700, UCF101, HMDB51 and IITH_Helmet2, showed that our model outperforms the existing GAN models for video super-resolution.

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 2164
Author(s):  
Md. Shahinur Alam ◽  
Ki-Chul Kwon ◽  
Munkh-Uchral Erdenebat ◽  
Mohammed Y. Abbass ◽  
Md. Ashraful Alam ◽  
...  

The integral imaging microscopy system provides a three-dimensional visualization of a microscopic object. However, it has a low-resolution problem due to the fundamental limitation of the F-number (the aperture stops) by using micro lens array (MLA) and a poor illumination environment. In this paper, a generative adversarial network (GAN)-based super-resolution algorithm is proposed to enhance the resolution where the directional view image is directly fed as input. In a GAN network, the generator regresses the high-resolution output from the low-resolution input image, whereas the discriminator distinguishes between the original and generated image. In the generator part, we use consecutive residual blocks with the content loss to retrieve the photo-realistic original image. It can restore the edges and enhance the resolution by ×2, ×4, and even ×8 times without seriously hampering the image quality. The model is tested with a variety of low-resolution microscopic sample images and successfully generates high-resolution directional view images with better illumination. The quantitative analysis shows that the proposed model performs better for microscopic images than the existing algorithms.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael C. Dimmick ◽  
Leo J. Lee ◽  
Brendan J. Frey

AbstractMotivationHi-C data has enabled the genome-wide study of chromatin folding and architecture, and has led to important discoveries in the structure and function of chromatin conformation. Here, high resolution data plays a particularly important role as many chromatin substructures such as Topologically Associating Domains (TADs) and chromatin loops cannot be adequately studied with low resolution contact maps. However, the high sequencing costs associated with the generation of high resolution Hi-C data has become an experimental barrier. Data driven machine learning models, which allow low resolution Hi-C data to be computationally enhanced, offer a promising avenue to address this challenge.ResultsBy carefully examining the properties of Hi-C maps and integrating various recent advances in deep learning, we developed a Hi-C Super-Resolution (HiCSR) framework capable of accurately recovering the fine details, textures, and substructures found in high resolution contact maps. This was achieved using a novel loss function tailored to the Hi-C enhancement problem which optimizes for an adversarial loss from a Generative Adversarial Network (GAN), a feature reconstruction loss derived from the latent representation of a denoising autoencoder, and a pixel-wise loss. Not only can the resulting framework generate enhanced Hi-C maps more visually similar to the original high resolution maps, it also excels on a suite of reproducibility metrics produced by members of the ENCODE Consortium compared to existing approaches, including HiCPlus, HiCNN, hicGAN and DeepHiC. Finally, we demonstrate that HiCSR is capable of enhancing Hi-C data across sequencing depth, cell types, and species, recovering biologically significant contact domain boundaries.AvailabilityWe make our implementation available for download at: https://github.com/PSI-Lab/[email protected] informationAvailable Online


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mustaeen Ur Rehman Qazi ◽  
Florian Wellmann

<p>Structural geological models are often calculated on a specific spatial resolution – for example in the form of grid representations, or when surfaces are extracted from implicit fields. However, the structural inventory in these models is limited by the underlying mathematical formulations. It is therefore logical that, above a certain resolution, no additional information is added to the representation.</p><p>We evaluate here if Deep Neural Networks can be trained to obtain a high-resolution representation based on a low-resolution structural model, at different levels of resolution. More specifically, we test the use of state-of-the-art Generative Adversarial Networks (GAN’s) for image superresolution in the context of 2-D geological model sections. These techniques aim to learn the hidden structure or information in high resolution image data set and then reproduce highly detailed and super resolved image from its low resolution counterpart. We propose the use of Generative Adversarial Networks GANS for super resolution of geological images and 2D geological models represented as images. In this work a generative adversarial network called SRGAN has been used which uses a perceptual loss function consisting of an adversarial loss, mean squared error loss and content loss for photo realistic image super resolution. First results are promising, but challenges remain due to the different interpretation of color in images for which these GAN’s are typically used, whereas we are mostly interested in structures.</p>


Author(s):  
Khaled ELKarazle ◽  
Valliappan Raman ◽  
Patrick Then

Age estimation models can be employed in many applications, including soft biometrics, content access control, targeted advertising, and many more. However, as some facial images are taken in unrestrained conditions, the quality relegates, which results in the loss of several essential ageing features. This study investigates how introducing a new layer of data processing based on a super-resolution generative adversarial network (SRGAN) model can influence the accuracy of age estimation by enhancing the quality of both the training and testing samples. Additionally, we introduce a novel convolutional neural network (CNN) classifier to distinguish between several age classes. We train one of our classifiers on a reconstructed version of the original dataset and compare its performance with an identical classifier trained on the original version of the same dataset. Our findings reveal that the classifier which trains on the reconstructed dataset produces better classification accuracy, opening the door for more research into building data-centric machine learning systems.


Author(s):  
F. Pineda ◽  
V. Ayma ◽  
C. Beltran

Abstract. High-resolution satellite images have always been in high demand due to the greater detail and precision they offer, as well as the wide scope of the fields in which they could be applied; however, satellites in operation offering very high-resolution (VHR) images has experienced an important increase, but they remain as a smaller proportion against existing lower resolution (HR) satellites. Recent models of convolutional neural networks (CNN) are very suitable for applications with image processing, like resolution enhancement of images; but in order to obtain an acceptable result, it is important, not only to define the kind of CNN architecture but the reference set of images to train the model. Our work proposes an alternative to improve the spatial resolution of HR images obtained by Sentinel-2 satellite by using the VHR images from PeruSat1, a peruvian satellite, which serve as the reference for the super-resolution approach implementation based on a Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) model, as an alternative for obtaining VHR images. The VHR PeruSat-1 image dataset is used for the training process of the network. The results obtained were analyzed considering the Peak Signal to Noise Ratios (PSNR) and the Structural Similarity (SSIM). Finally, some visual outcomes, over a given testing dataset, are presented so the performance of the model could be analyzed as well.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
Fayaz Ali Dharejo ◽  
Farah Deeba ◽  
Yuanchun Zhou ◽  
Bhagwan Das ◽  
Munsif Ali Jatoi ◽  
...  

Single Image Super-resolution (SISR) produces high-resolution images with fine spatial resolutions from a remotely sensed image with low spatial resolution. Recently, deep learning and generative adversarial networks (GANs) have made breakthroughs for the challenging task of single image super-resolution (SISR) . However, the generated image still suffers from undesirable artifacts such as the absence of texture-feature representation and high-frequency information. We propose a frequency domain-based spatio-temporal remote sensing single image super-resolution technique to reconstruct the HR image combined with generative adversarial networks (GANs) on various frequency bands (TWIST-GAN). We have introduced a new method incorporating Wavelet Transform (WT) characteristics and transferred generative adversarial network. The LR image has been split into various frequency bands by using the WT, whereas the transfer generative adversarial network predicts high-frequency components via a proposed architecture. Finally, the inverse transfer of wavelets produces a reconstructed image with super-resolution. The model is first trained on an external DIV2 K dataset and validated with the UC Merced Landsat remote sensing dataset and Set14 with each image size of 256 × 256. Following that, transferred GANs are used to process spatio-temporal remote sensing images in order to minimize computation cost differences and improve texture information. The findings are compared qualitatively and qualitatively with the current state-of-art approaches. In addition, we saved about 43% of the GPU memory during training and accelerated the execution of our simplified version by eliminating batch normalization layers.


Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (16) ◽  
pp. 4601
Author(s):  
Juan Wen ◽  
Yangjing Shi ◽  
Xiaoshi Zhou ◽  
Yiming Xue

Currently, various agricultural image classification tasks are carried out on high-resolution images. However, in some cases, we cannot get enough high-resolution images for classification, which significantly affects classification performance. In this paper, we design a crop disease classification network based on Enhanced Super-Resolution Generative adversarial networks (ESRGAN) when only an insufficient number of low-resolution target images are available. First, ESRGAN is used to recover super-resolution crop images from low-resolution images. Transfer learning is applied in model training to compensate for the lack of training samples. Then, we test the performance of the generated super-resolution images in crop disease classification task. Extensive experiments show that using the fine-tuned ESRGAN model can recover realistic crop information and improve the accuracy of crop disease classification, compared with the other four image super-resolution methods.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Linyan Li ◽  
Yu Sun ◽  
Fuyuan Hu ◽  
Tao Zhou ◽  
Xuefeng Xi ◽  
...  

In this paper, we propose an Attentional Concatenation Generative Adversarial Network (ACGAN) aiming at generating 1024 × 1024 high-resolution images. First, we propose a multilevel cascade structure, for text-to-image synthesis. During training progress, we gradually add new layers and, at the same time, use the results and word vectors from the previous layer as inputs to the next layer to generate high-resolution images with photo-realistic details. Second, the deep attentional multimodal similarity model is introduced into the network, and we match word vectors with images in a common semantic space to compute a fine-grained matching loss for training the generator. In this way, we can pay attention to the fine-grained information of the word level in the semantics. Finally, the measure of diversity is added to the discriminator, which enables the generator to obtain more diverse gradient directions and improve the diversity of generated samples. The experimental results show that the inception scores of the proposed model on the CUB and Oxford-102 datasets have reached 4.48 and 4.16, improved by 2.75% and 6.42% compared to Attentional Generative Adversarial Networks (AttenGAN). The ACGAN model has a better effect on text-generated images, and the resulting image is closer to the real image.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiali Wang ◽  
Zhengchun Liu ◽  
Ian Foster ◽  
Won Chang ◽  
Rajkumar Kettimuthu ◽  
...  

Abstract. This study develops a neural network-based approach for emulating high-resolution modeled precipitation data with comparable statistical properties but at greatly reduced computational cost. The key idea is to use combination of low- and high- resolution simulations to train a neural network to map from the former to the latter. Specifically, we define two types of CNNs, one that stacks variables directly and one that encodes each variable before stacking, and we train each CNN type both with a conventional loss function, such as mean square error (MSE), and with a conditional generative adversarial network (CGAN), for a total of four CNN variants.We compare the four new CNN-derived high-resolution precipitation results with precipitation generated from original high resolution simulations, a bilinear interpolater and the state-of-the-art CNN-based super-resolution (SR) technique. Results show that the SR technique produces results similar to those of the bilinear interpolator with smoother spatial and temporal distributions and smaller data variabilities and extremes than the high resolution simulations. While the new CNNs trained by MSE generate better results over some regions than the interpolator and SR technique do, their predictions are still not as close as ground truth. The CNNs trained by CGAN generate more realistic and physically reasonable results, better capturing not only data variability in time and space but also extremes such as intense and long-lasting storms. The new proposed CNN-based downscaling approach can downscale precipitation from 50 km to 12 km in 14 min for 30 years once the network is trained (training takes 4 hours using 1 GPU), while the conventional dynamical downscaling would take 1 months using 600 CPU cores to generate simulations at the resolution of 12 km over contiguous United States.


Author(s):  
Guoliang Wu ◽  
Yanjie Wang ◽  
Shi Li

Existing depth map-based super-resolution (SR) methods cannot achieve satisfactory results in depth map detail restoration. For example, boundaries of the depth map are always difficult to reconstruct effectively from the low-resolution (LR) guided depth map particularly at big magnification factors. In this paper, we present a novel super-resolution method for single depth map by introducing a deep feedback network (DFN), which can effectively enhance the feature representations at depth boundaries that utilize iterative up-sampling and down-sampling operations, building a deep feedback mechanism by projecting high-resolution (HR) representations to low-resolution spatial domain and then back-projecting to high-resolution spatial domain. The deep feedback (DF) block imitates the process of image degradation and reconstruction iteratively. The rich intermediate high-resolution features effectively tackle the problem of depth boundary ambiguity in depth map super-resolution. Extensive experimental results on the benchmark datasets show that our proposed DFN outperforms the state-of-the-art methods.


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