Abstract

The method of wavelet thresholding for removing noise, or denoising, has been researched extensively due to its effectiveness and simplicity. Much of the work has been concentrated on finding the best uniform threshold or best basis. However, not much has been done to make this method adaptive to spatially changing statistics which is typical of a large class of images. This work proposes a spatially adaptive wavelet thresholding method based on context modeling, a common technique used in image compression to adapt the coder to the non-stationarity of images. We model each coefficient as a random variable with the generalized Gaussian prior with unknown parameters. Context modeling is used to estimate the parameters for each coefficient, which are then used to adapt the thresholding strategy. Experimental results show that spatially adaptive wavelet thresholding yields significantly superior image quality and lower MSE than optimal uniform thresholding.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call