Paper
7 March 2014 No training blind image quality assessment
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 9023, Digital Photography X; 90230B (2014) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2042461
Event: IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging, 2014, San Francisco, California, United States
Abstract
State of the art blind image quality assessment (IQA) methods generally extract perceptual features from the training images, and send them into support vector machine (SVM) to learn the regression model, which could be used to further predict the quality scores of the testing images. However, these methods need complicated training and learning, and the evaluation results are sensitive to image contents and learning strategies. In this paper, two novel blind IQA metrics without training and learning are firstly proposed. The new methods extract perceptual features, i.e., the shape consistency of conditional histograms, from the joint histograms of neighboring divisive normalization transform coefficients of distorted images, and then compare the length attribute of the extracted features with that of the reference images and degraded images in the LIVE database. For the first method, a cluster center is found in the feature attribute space of the natural reference images, and the distance between the feature attribute of the distorted image and the cluster center is adopted as the quality label. The second method utilizes the feature attributes and subjective scores of all the images in the LIVE database to construct a dictionary, and the final quality score is calculated by interpolating the subjective scores of nearby words in the dictionary. Unlike the traditional SVM based blind IQA methods, the proposed metrics have explicit expressions, which reflect the relationships of the perceptual features and the image quality well. Experiment results in the publicly available databases such as LIVE, CSIQ and TID2008 had shown the effectiveness of the proposed methods, and the performances are fairly acceptable.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ying Chu, Xuanqin Mou, and Zhen Ji "No training blind image quality assessment", Proc. SPIE 9023, Digital Photography X, 90230B (7 March 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2042461
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KEYWORDS
Image quality

Databases

Associative arrays

Distortion

Feature extraction

Image processing

JPEG2000

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