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Tian Liang

Bio: Tian Liang is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Color balance & Demosaicing. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications receiving 49 citations.

Papers
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TL;DR: This paper reviews the second AIM learned ISP challenge and provides the description of the proposed solutions and results, defining the state-of-the-art for practical image signal processing pipeline modeling.
Abstract: This paper reviews the second AIM learned ISP challenge and provides the description of the proposed solutions and results. The participating teams were solving a real-world RAW-to-RGB mapping problem, where to goal was to map the original low-quality RAW images captured by the Huawei P20 device to the same photos obtained with the Canon 5D DSLR camera. The considered task embraced a number of complex computer vision subtasks, such as image demosaicing, denoising, white balancing, color and contrast correction, demoireing, etc. The target metric used in this challenge combined fidelity scores (PSNR and SSIM) with solutions' perceptual results measured in a user study. The proposed solutions significantly improved the baseline results, defining the state-of-the-art for practical image signal processing pipeline modeling.

44 citations

Book ChapterDOI
23 Aug 2020
TL;DR: The second AIM learned ISP challenge as mentioned in this paper focused on real-world RAW-to-RGB mapping problem, where the goal was to map the original low-quality RAW images captured by the Huawei P20 device to the same photos obtained with the Canon 5D DSLR camera.
Abstract: This paper reviews the second AIM learned ISP challenge and provides the description of the proposed solutions and results. The participating teams were solving a real-world RAW-to-RGB mapping problem, where to goal was to map the original low-quality RAW images captured by the Huawei P20 device to the same photos obtained with the Canon 5D DSLR camera. The considered task embraced a number of complex computer vision subtasks, such as image demosaicing, denoising, white balancing, color and contrast correction, demoireing, etc. The target metric used in this challenge combined fidelity scores (PSNR and SSIM) with solutions’ perceptual results measured in a user study. The proposed solutions significantly improved the baseline results, defining the state-of-the-art for practical image signal processing pipeline modeling.

32 citations

Book ChapterDOI
23 Aug 2020
TL;DR: EDNet as mentioned in this paper proposes a hypothesis of the receptive field that large receptive field is essential in high-level computer vision tasks, but not crucial in low-level pixel-to-pixel tasks.
Abstract: Image Signal Processor (ISP) plays a core rule in camera systems However, ISP tuning is highly complicated and requires professional skills and advanced imaging experiences To skip the painful ISP tuning process, we introduce EEDNet in this paper, which directly transforms an image in the raw space to an image in the sRGB space (RAW-to-RGB) Data-driven RAW-to-RGB mapping is a grand new low-level vision task In this work, we propose a hypothesis of the receptive field that large receptive field (LRF) is essential in high-level computer vision tasks, but not crucial in low-level pixel-to-pixel tasks Besides, we present a ClipL1 loss, which simultaneously considers easy examples and outliers during the optimization process Benefiting from the LRF hypothesis and ClipL1 loss, EEDNet can generate high-quality pictures with more details Our method achieves promising results on Zurich RAW2RGB (ZRR) dataset and won the first place in AIM2020 ISP challenging

13 citations


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Hengyuan Zhao1, Xiangtao Kong1, Jingwen He1, Yu Qiao1, Chao Dong1 
TL;DR: This work designs a lightweight convolutional neural network for image super resolution with a newly proposed pixel attention scheme that could achieve similar performance as the lightweight networks - SRResNet and CARN, but with only 272K parameters.
Abstract: This work aims at designing a lightweight convolutional neural network for image super resolution (SR). With simplicity bare in mind, we construct a pretty concise and effective network with a newly proposed pixel attention scheme. Pixel attention (PA) is similar as channel attention and spatial attention in formulation. The difference is that PA produces 3D attention maps instead of a 1D attention vector or a 2D map. This attention scheme introduces fewer additional parameters but generates better SR results. On the basis of PA, we propose two building blocks for the main branch and the reconstruction branch, respectively. The first one - SC-PA block has the same structure as the Self-Calibrated convolution but with our PA layer. This block is much more efficient than conventional residual/dense blocks, for its twobranch architecture and attention scheme. While the second one - UPA block combines the nearest-neighbor upsampling, convolution and PA layers. It improves the final reconstruction quality with little parameter cost. Our final model- PAN could achieve similar performance as the lightweight networks - SRResNet and CARN, but with only 272K parameters (17.92% of SRResNet and 17.09% of CARN). The effectiveness of each proposed component is also validated by ablation study. The code is available at this https URL.

128 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
16 Jun 2019
TL;DR: The 3rd NTIRE challenge on single-image super-resolution (restoration of rich details in a low-resolution image) is reviewed with a focus on proposed solutions and results and the state-of-the-art in real-world single image super- resolution.
Abstract: This paper reviewed the 3rd NTIRE challenge on single-image super-resolution (restoration of rich details in a low-resolution image) with a focus on proposed solutions and results. The challenge had 1 track, which was aimed at the real-world single image super-resolution problem with an unknown scaling factor. Participants were mapping low-resolution images captured by a DSLR camera with a shorter focal length to their high-resolution images captured at a longer focal length. With this challenge, we introduced a novel real-world super-resolution dataset (RealSR). The track had 403 registered participants, and 36 teams competed in the final testing phase. They gauge the state-of-the-art in real-world single image super-resolution.

118 citations

Book ChapterDOI
Hengyuan Zhao1, Xiangtao Kong1, Jingwen He1, Yu Qiao1, Chao Dong1 
23 Aug 2020
TL;DR: Zhao et al. as discussed by the authors designed a lightweight convolutional neural network with a pixel attention scheme, which produces 3D attention maps instead of a 1D attention vector or a 2D map.
Abstract: This work aims at designing a lightweight convolutional neural network for image super resolution (SR). With simplicity bare in mind, we construct a pretty concise and effective network with a newly proposed pixel attention scheme. Pixel attention (PA) is similar as channel attention and spatial attention in formulation. The difference is that PA produces 3D attention maps instead of a 1D attention vector or a 2D map. This attention scheme introduces fewer additional parameters but generates better SR results. On the basis of PA, we propose two building blocks for the main branch and the reconstruction branch, respectively. The first one—SC-PA block has the same structure as the Self-Calibrated convolution but with our PA layer. This block is much more efficient than conventional residual/dense blocks, for its two-branch architecture and attention scheme. While the second one—U-PA block combines the nearest-neighbor upsampling, convolution and PA layers. It improves the final reconstruction quality with little parameter cost. Our final model—PAN could achieve similar performance as the lightweight networks—SRResNet and CARN, but with only 272K parameters (17.92% of SRResNet and 17.09% of CARN). The effectiveness of each proposed component is also validated by ablation study. The code is available at https://github.com/zhaohengyuan1/PAN.

80 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2021
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduced the first Mobile AI challenge, where the target is to develop an end-to-end deep learning-based image super-resolution solutions that can demonstrate a realtime performance on mobile or edge NPUs.
Abstract: Image super-resolution is one of the most popular computer vision problems with many important applications to mobile devices. While many solutions have been proposed for this task, they are usually not optimized even for common smartphone AI hardware, not to mention more constrained smart TV platforms that are often supporting INT8 inference only. To address this problem, we introduce the first Mobile AI challenge, where the target is to develop an end-to-end deep learning-based image super-resolution solutions that can demonstrate a real-time performance on mobile or edge NPUs. For this, the participants were provided with the DIV2K dataset and trained quantized models to do an efficient 3X image upscaling. The runtime of all models was evaluated on the Synaptics VS680 Smart Home board with a dedicated NPU capable of accelerating quantized neural networks. The proposed solutions are fully compatible with all major mobile AI accelerators and are capable of reconstructing Full HD images under 40-60 ms while achieving high fidelity results. A detailed description of all models developed in the challenge is provided in this paper.

74 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: The AIM 2020 challenge on efficient single image super-resolution was to super-resolve an input image with a magnification factor x4 based on a set of prior examples of low and corresponding high resolution images with focus on the proposed solutions and results.
Abstract: This paper reviews the AIM 2020 challenge on efficient single image super-resolution with focus on the proposed solutions and results. The challenge task was to super-resolve an input image with a magnification factor x4 based on a set of prior examples of low and corresponding high resolution images. The goal is to devise a network that reduces one or several aspects such as runtime, parameter count, FLOPs, activations, and memory consumption while at least maintaining PSNR of MSRResNet. The track had 150 registered participants, and 25 teams submitted the final results. They gauge the state-of-the-art in efficient single image super-resolution.

55 citations