2006 NIPS NeurIPS 2006

Blind Motion Deblurring Using Image Statistics

Abstract

We address the problem of blind motion deblurring from a single image, caused by a few moving objects. In such situations only part of the image may be blurred, and the scene consists of layers blurred in different degrees. Most of of existing blind deconvolution research concentrates at recovering a single blurring kernel for the entire image. However, in the case of different motions, the blur cannot be modeled with a single kernel, and trying to deconvolve the entire image with the same kernel will cause serious artifacts. Thus, the task of deblurring needs to involve segmentation of the image into regions with different blurs. Our approach relies on the observation that the statistics of derivative filters in images are significantly changed by blur. Assuming the blur results from a constant velocity motion, we can limit the search to one dimensional box filter blurs. This enables us to model the expected derivatives distributions as a function of the width of the blur kernel. Those distributions are surprisingly powerful in discriminating regions with different blurs. The approach produces convincing deconvolution results on real world images with rich texture.

🚀 Conference Pioneer — NIPS 2006
📈 Trend Setter — Image Restoration
🧭 Keyword Pioneer — motion deblurring
🐝 Cross-Pollinator — Artificial Intelligence, Computer Vision, Deep Learning, Healthcare & Medicine, Machine Learning, Mathematics & Optimization
🌱 Topic Pioneer — Motion Estimation
🌉 Interdisciplinary Bridge — Computer Vision and Deep Learning
🐣 Hot Topic Early Bird — image restoration

Authors