Abstract

In turbid water, the attenuation and scattering of light caused by scatterers make underwater optical images degraded, blurred, and contrast reduced, limiting the extraction and analysis of information from images. To address such problems, a turbid underwater image enhancement method based on parameter-tuned stochastic resonance (SR) is proposed in this article. First, an SR algorithm framework for underwater image enhancement is constructed, including the dimensionality reduction and normalization of input images, the solution and parameter optimization of the SR system, the dimensionality upgrading of output images, etc. This framework can apply the SR's ability to enhance weak signals to the enhancement of turbid underwater images. Second, to measure the performance of the system, a synthetic turbid underwater image data set (UWCHIC) is constructed using the underwater imaging model and an image set with simulated scatterers. Based on this data set, the relationship between various image quality evaluation metrics and system parameters is analyzed, and then the suitable no-reference (NR) metrics for system performance evaluation are selected and an adaptive parameter tuning strategy of the SR system is proposed to guide the image enhancement. Lastly, the proposed method is evaluated on the UWCHIC, a dataset to evaluate underwater image restoration methods (TURBID), marine underwater environment database (MUED), and underwater image enhancement benchmark (UIEB) data sets and the turbid underwater images captured from natural waters. Different experimental evaluations demonstrated that the proposed method not only effectively enhances the visual quality of turbid underwater images but also improves the performance of downstream vision tasks.

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