Abstract

Traditional image fusion techniques generally use symmetrical methods to extract features from different sources of images. However, these conventional approaches do not resolve the information domain discrepancy from multiple sources, resulting in the incompleteness of fusion. To solve the problem, we propose an asymmetric decomposition method. Firstly, an information abundance discrimination method is used to sort images into detailed and coarse categories. Then, different decomposition methods are proposed to extract features at different scales. Next, different fusion strategies are adopted for different scale features, including sum fusion, variance-based transformation, integrated fusion, and energy-based fusion. Finally, the fusion result is obtained through summation, retaining vital features from both images. Eight fusion metrics and two datasets containing registered visible, ISAR, and infrared images were adopted to evaluate the performance of the proposed method. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed asymmetric decomposition method could preserve more details than the symmetric one, and performed better in both objective and subjective evaluations compared with the fifteen state-of-the-art fusion methods. These findings can inspire researchers to consider a new asymmetric fusion framework that can adapt to the differences in information richness of the images, and promote the development of fusion technology.

Full Text
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