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Alan C. Bovik
Researcher at University of Texas at Austin
Publications - 872
Citations - 120104
Alan C. Bovik is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Austin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Image quality & Video quality. The author has an hindex of 102, co-authored 837 publications receiving 96088 citations. Previous affiliations of Alan C. Bovik include University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign & University of Sydney.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Image quality assessment: from error visibility to structural similarity
TL;DR: In this article, a structural similarity index is proposed for image quality assessment based on the degradation of structural information, which can be applied to both subjective ratings and objective methods on a database of images compressed with JPEG and JPEG2000.
Journal ArticleDOI
A universal image quality index
Zhou Wang,Alan C. Bovik +1 more
TL;DR: Although the new index is mathematically defined and no human visual system model is explicitly employed, experiments on various image distortion types indicate that it performs significantly better than the widely used distortion metric mean squared error.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Multiscale structural similarity for image quality assessment
TL;DR: This paper proposes a multiscale structural similarity method, which supplies more flexibility than previous single-scale methods in incorporating the variations of viewing conditions, and develops an image synthesis method to calibrate the parameters that define the relative importance of different scales.
Journal ArticleDOI
No-Reference Image Quality Assessment in the Spatial Domain
TL;DR: Despite its simplicity, it is able to show that BRISQUE is statistically better than the full-reference peak signal-to-noise ratio and the structural similarity index, and is highly competitive with respect to all present-day distortion-generic NR IQA algorithms.
Journal ArticleDOI
Making a “Completely Blind” Image Quality Analyzer
TL;DR: This work has recently derived a blind IQA model that only makes use of measurable deviations from statistical regularities observed in natural images, without training on human-rated distorted images, and, indeed, without any exposure to distorted images.