Abstract

Multi-view video plus depth (MVD) is the promising and widely adopted data representation for future 3D visual applications and interactive media. However, compression distortions on depth videos impede the development of such applications, and filters are crucially needed for the quality enhancement at the terminal side. Cross-view priors can intuitively be involved in filter design, but these priors are also distorted in compression and thus the contribution of them can hardly be considered in previous research. In this article, we propose a cross-view optimized filter for depth map quality enhancement by making full use of inner- and cross-view priors. We dedicate to evaluate the contributions of distorted cross-view priors in filtering the current view of depth, and then both inner- and cross-view priors can be involved in the filter design. Thus, distortions of cross-view priors are not barriers again as before. For the purpose of that, mutual information guided cross-view consistency is designed to evaluate the contributions of cross-view priors from compression distortions of MVD. After that, under the framework of global optimization, both inner- and cross-view priors are modeled and taken to minimize the designed energy function where both data accuracy and spatial smoothness are modeled. The experimental results show that the proposed model outperforms state-of-the-art methods, where 3.289 dB and 0.0407 average gains on peak signal-to-noise ratio and structural similarity metrics can be obtained, respectively. For the subjective evaluations, object details and structure information are recovered in the compressed depth video. We also verify our method via several practical applications, including virtual view synthesis for smooth interaction and point cloud for 3D modeling for accuracy evaluation. In these verifications, the ringing and malposition artifacts on object contours are properly handled for interactive video, and discontinuous object surfaces are restored for 3D modeling. All of these results suggest that compression distortions in MVD can be properly filtered by the proposed model, which provides a promising solution for future bandwidth constrained 3D and interactive visual applications.

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