Abstract

Reconstructing a full-resolution stereoscopic video from an asymmetric stereoscopic video is a challenging task. The existing approaches require depth information, which imposes an additional challenge in data acquisition. In this paper, we propose a novel scheme that is capable of obtaining super-resolution and depth estimation simultaneously from an asymmetric stereoscopic video. The proposed scheme models the video super-resolution and stereo matching with a unified energy function. Then, we apply an alternating optimization method to minimize this energy function, which can be implemented with a two-step algorithm. In the first step we calculate the initial depth map by using a region-based cooperative optimization technique while considering the temporal consistency in video. In the second step we resolve the super-resolution problem under the guidance of the depth information. It is effective because each step benefits from the additional improvement over the previous step. We iteratively update the two steps until stable depth and super-resolution results are obtained. We have conducted a series of experiments on public stereoscopic video sequences to evaluate the performance of the proposed method. Both objective indexes and subjective visual comparisons verify that the proposed scheme can achieve satisfactory super-resolution results and high-quality depth map simultaneously. In particular, the subjective evaluation experiments on a 3-D monitor show that this scheme outperforms others and achieves the best visual sharpness.

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