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September 2007) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Original image, with good text edges and color grade Loss of edge clarity and tone "fuzziness" in heavy JPEG compression A compression artifact (or artefact ) is a noticeable distortion of media (including images , audio , and video ) caused by the application of lossy compression .
Generally, the luminance noise looks more like film grain, while chroma noise looks more unnatural or digital-like. [2] Video denoising methods are designed and tuned for specific types of noise. Typical video noise types are the following: Analog noise Radio channel artifacts High-frequency interference (dots, short horizontal color lines, etc.)
Noise reduction is the process of removing noise from a signal. Noise reduction techniques exist for audio and images. Noise reduction algorithms may distort the signal to some degree. Noise rejection is the ability of a circuit to isolate an undesired signal component from the desired signal component, as with common-mode rejection ratio.
This category collects Wikipedia articles on techniques for removal or reduction of noise and artifacts from images and multi-dimensional data. Pages in category "Image noise reduction techniques" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total.
The high sensitivity image quality of a given camera (or RAW development workflow) may depend greatly on the quality of the algorithm used for noise reduction. Since noise levels increase as ISO sensitivity is increased, most camera manufacturers increase the noise reduction aggressiveness automatically at higher sensitivities. This leads to a ...
A digital watermark is called semi-fragile if it resists benign transformations, but fails detection after malignant transformations. Semi-fragile watermarks commonly are used to detect malignant transformations. A digital watermark is called robust if it resists a designated class of transformations. Robust watermarks may be used in copy ...
Noise, static or snow screen captured from a blank VHS tape. Noise, commonly known as static, white noise, static noise, or snow, in analog video, CRTs and television, is a random dot pixel pattern of static displayed when no transmission signal is obtained by the antenna receiver of television sets and other display devices.
For color images with three RGB values per pixel, the definition of PSNR is the same except that the MSE is the sum over all squared value differences (now for each color, i.e. three times as many differences as in a monochrome image) divided by image size and by three.