Abstract

In contemporary society full of stereoscopic images, how to assess visual quality of 3D images has attracted an increasing attention in field of Stereoscopic Image Quality Assessment (SIQA). Compared with 2D-IQA, SIQA is more challenging because some complicated features of Human Visual System (HVS), such as binocular interaction and binocular fusion, must be considered. In this paper, considering both binocular interaction and fusion mechanisms of the HVS, a hierarchical no-reference stereoscopic image quality assessment network (StereoIF-Net) is proposed to simulate the whole quality perception of 3D visual signals in human cortex, including two key modules: BIM and BFM. In particular, Binocular Interaction Modules (BIMs) are constructed to simulate binocular interaction in V2-V5 visual cortex regions, in which a novel cross convolution is designed to explore the interaction details in each region. In the BIMs, different output channel numbers are designed to imitate various receptive fields in V2-V5. Furthermore, a Binocular Fusion Module (BFM) with automatic learned weights is proposed to model binocular fusion of the HVS in higher cortex layers. The verification experiments are conducted on the LIVE 3D, IVC and Waterloo-IVC SIQA databases and three indices including PLCC, SROCC and RMSE are employed to evaluate the assessment consistency between StereoIF-Net and the HVS. The proposed StereoIF-Net achieves almost the best results compared with advanced SIQA methods. Specifically, the metric values on LIVE 3D, IVC and WIVC-I are the best, and are the second-best on the WIVC-II.

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