Assessment of Image Manipulation Using Natural Language Description: Quantification of Manipulation Direction
Yuto Watanabe, Ren Togo, Keisuke Maeda, Takahiro Ogawa, Miki Haseyama
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in recent years, deep neural network-based restoration methods have achieved state-of-the-art results in various image deblurring tasks. However, one major drawback of deep learning-based deblurring networks is that large amounts of blurry-clean image pairs are required for training to achieve good performance. Moreover, deep networks often fail to perform well when the blurry images and the blur kernels during testing are very different from the ones used during training. This happens mainly because of the overfitting of the network parameters on the training data. in this work, we present a method that addresses these issues. We view the non-blind image deblurring problem as a denoising problem. To do so, we perform Wiener filtering on a pair of blurry images with the corresponding blur kernels. This results in a pair of images with colored noise. Hence, the deblurring problem is translated into a denoising problem. We then solve the denoising problem without using explicit clean target images. Extensive experiments are conducted to show that our method achieves results that are on par with the state-of-the-art non-blind deblurring works.