Inverse Problems in Vision and 3D TomographyISBN: 978-1-84821-172-8
Hardcover
467 pages
January 2010, Wiley-ISTE
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The concept of an inverse problem is a familiar one to most
scientists and engineers, particularly in the field of signal and
image processing, imaging systems (medical, geophysical, industrial
non-destructive testing, etc.) and computer vision. In imaging
systems, the aim is not just to estimate unobserved images, but
also their geometric characteristics from observed quantities that
are linked to these unobserved quantities through the forward
problem. This book focuses on imagery and vision problems that can
be clearly written in terms of an inverse problem where an estimate
for the image and its geometrical attributes (contours and regions)
is sought.
The chapters of this book use a consistent methodology to examine inverse problems such as: noise removal; restoration by deconvolution; 2D or 3D reconstruction in X-ray, tomography or microwave imaging; reconstruction of the surface of a 3D object using X-ray tomography or making use of its shading; reconstruction of the surface of a 3D landscape based on several satellite photos; super-resolution; motion estimation in a sequence of images; separation of several images mixed using instruments with different sensitivities or transfer functions; and more.