Abstract

SummaryIn this paper we study the applicability of classical blind deconvolution methods such as constant modulus algorithm (CMA) for blind adaptive image restoration. The requirements such as the source to be white, uniformly distributed and zero mean, which yield satisfactory convergence in the data communication application context, are revisited in the image restoration context, where a linear deblur kernel needs to be blindly adapted to compensate for an unknown image blur kernel with the objective to recover a source ground truth image. Through analysis and performance studies, we show that the performance of CMA is adversely affected by the intrinsic spatial correlation of natural images and by any deviation of their distribution from being platykurtic. We also show that decorrelation techniques designed to overcome spatial correlation cannot be effectively applied to rectify CMA performance for blind adaptive image restoration. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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