Abstract

An underwater image often suffers from quality degradation issues, such as color deviations, low contrast, and blurred details, due to the absorption and scattering of light. In this article, we propose to address the aforementioned degradation issues via attenuated color channel correction and detail preserved contrast enhancement. Concretely, we first propose an underwater image color correction method. Considering the differences between superior and inferior color channels of an underwater image, the inferior color channels are compensated via especially designed attenuation matrices. We then employ a dual-histogram-based iterative threshold method and a limited histogram method with Rayleigh distribution to improve the global and local contrast of the color-corrected image, thus achieving a global contrast-enhanced version and a local contrast-enhanced version, respectively. To integrate the complementary merits between the global contrast-enhanced version and the local contrast-enhanced version, we adopt a multiscale fusion strategy to fuse them. Finally, we propose a multiscale unsharp masking strategy to further sharpen the fused image for better visual quality. Extensive experiments on four underwater image enhancement benchmark data sets demonstrate that our method effectively enhances underwater images qualitatively and quantitatively. Besides, our method also generalizes well to the enhancement of low-light images and hazy images.

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