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  2. Image restoration by artificial intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_restoration_by...

    Image processing techniques are performed either in the image domain or the frequency domain. The most straightforward and a conventional technique for image restoration is deconvolution , which is performed in the frequency domain and after computing the Fourier transform of both the image and the PSF and undo the resolution loss caused by the ...

  3. Resolution (logic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resolution_(logic)

    The resolution rule, as defined by Robinson, also incorporated factoring, which unifies two literals in the same clause, before or during the application of resolution as defined above. The resulting inference rule is refutation-complete, [ 6 ] in that a set of clauses is unsatisfiable if and only if there exists a derivation of the empty ...

  4. Richardson–Lucy deconvolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richardson–Lucy...

    This has been written for one spatial dimension, but most imaging systems are two dimensional, with the source, detected image, and point spread function all having two indices. So a two dimensional detected image is a convolution of the underlying image with a two dimensional point spread function P ( Δ x , Δ y ) {\displaystyle P(\Delta x ...

  5. Super-resolution imaging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super-resolution_imaging

    These methods use other parts of the low resolution images, or other unrelated images, to guess what the high-resolution image should look like. Algorithms can also be divided by their domain: frequency or space domain. Originally, super-resolution methods worked well only on grayscale images, [18] but researchers have found methods to adapt ...

  6. Comparison gallery of image scaling algorithms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_gallery_of...

    The resulting image is larger than the original, and preserves all the original detail, but has (possibly undesirable) jaggedness. The diagonal lines of the "W", for example, now show the "stairway" shape characteristic of nearest-neighbor interpolation. Other scaling methods below are better at preserving smooth contours in the image.

  7. CHIRP (algorithm) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CHIRP_(algorithm)

    CHIRP (Continuous High-resolution Image Reconstruction using Patch priors) is a Bayesian algorithm used to perform a deconvolution on images created in radio astronomy. The acronym was coined by lead author Katherine L. Bouman in 2016.

  8. Deep image prior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_Image_Prior

    Deep image prior is a type of convolutional neural network used to enhance a given image with no prior training data other than the image itself. A neural network is randomly initialized and used as prior to solve inverse problems such as noise reduction , super-resolution , and inpainting .

  9. Image restoration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_restoration

    Image restoration may refer to: Conservation and restoration of photographs; ... Image restoration by artificial intelligence; Iterative reconstruction; See also