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  2. Gaussian noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_noise

    Principal sources of Gaussian noise in digital images arise during acquisition e.g. sensor noise caused by poor illumination and/or high temperature, and/or transmission e.g. electronic circuit noise. [3] In digital image processing Gaussian noise can be reduced using a spatial filter, though when smoothing an image, an undesirable outcome may ...

  3. Geometric mean filter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_mean_filter

    Each pixel of the output image at point (x,y) is given by the product of the pixels within the geometric mean mask raised to the power of 1/mn. For example, using a mask size of 3 by 3, pixel (x,y) in the output image will be the product of S(x,y) and all 8 of its surrounding pixels raised to the 1/9th power.

  4. Latent diffusion model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latent_Diffusion_Model

    The Latent Diffusion Model (LDM) [1] is a diffusion model architecture developed by the CompVis (Computer Vision & Learning) [2] group at LMU Munich. [3]Introduced in 2015, diffusion models (DMs) are trained with the objective of removing successive applications of noise (commonly Gaussian) on training images.

  5. Total variation denoising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_variation_denoising

    The regularization parameter plays a critical role in the denoising process. When =, there is no smoothing and the result is the same as minimizing the sum of squares.As , however, the total variation term plays an increasingly strong role, which forces the result to have smaller total variation, at the expense of being less like the input (noisy) signal.

  6. Diffusion model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffusion_model

    Each image is a point in the space of all images, and the distribution of naturally-occurring photos is a "cloud" in space, which, by repeatedly adding noise to the images, diffuses out to the rest of the image space, until the cloud becomes all but indistinguishable from a Gaussian distribution (,). A model that can approximately undo the ...

  7. Gaussian filter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_filter

    By averaging pixel values with a weighted Gaussian distribution, the filter effectively blurs the image, diminishing high-frequency noise. [12] Edge Detection: Gaussian filters are often used as a preprocessing step in edge detection algorithms. By smoothing the image, they help to minimize the impact of noise before applying methods like the ...

  8. Gaussian blur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_blur

    In image processing, a Gaussian blur (also known as Gaussian smoothing) is the result of blurring an image by a Gaussian function (named after mathematician and scientist Carl Friedrich Gauss). It is a widely used effect in graphics software, typically to reduce image noise and reduce detail.

  9. Non-local means - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-local_means

    Non-local means is an algorithm in image processing for image denoising. Unlike "local mean" filters, which take the mean value of a group of pixels surrounding a target pixel to smooth the image, non-local means filtering takes a mean of all pixels in the image, weighted by how similar these pixels are to the target pixel. This results in much ...