Abstract

We address the problem of correcting the exposure of underexposed photos. Previous methods have tackled this problem from many different perspectives and achieved remarkable progress. However, they usually fail to produce natural-looking results due to the existence of visual artifacts such as color distortion, loss of detail, exposure inconsistency, etc. We find that the main reason why existing methods induce these artifacts is because they break a perceptually similarity between the input and output. Based on this observation, an effective criterion, termed as perceptually bidirectional similarity (PBS) is proposed. Based on this criterion and the Retinex theory, we cast the exposure correction problem as an illumination estimation optimization, where PBS is defined as three constraints for estimating illumination that can generate the desired result with even exposure, vivid color and clear textures. Qualitative and quantitative comparisons, and the user study demonstrate the superiority of our method over the state-of-the-art methods.

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