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Most apparent distortion: full-reference image quality assessment and the role of strategy

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TLDR
A quality assessment method [most apparent distortion (MAD)], which attempts to explicitly model these two separate strategies, local luminance and contrast masking and changes in the local statistics of spatial-frequency components are used to estimate appearance-based perceived distortion in low-quality images.
Abstract
The mainstream approach to image quality assessment has centered around accurately modeling the single most relevant strategy employed by the human visual system (HVS) when judging image quality (e.g., detecting visible differences, and extracting image structure/information). In this work, we suggest that a single strategy may not be sufficient; rather, we advocate that the HVS uses multiple strategies to determine image quality. For images containing near-threshold distortions, the image is most apparent, and thus the HVS attempts to look past the image and look for the distortions (a detection-based strategy). For images containing clearly visible distortions, the distortions are most apparent, and thus the HVS attempts to look past the distortion and look for the image's subject matter (an appearance-based strategy). Here, we present a quality assessment method [most apparent distortion (MAD)], which attempts to explicitly model these two separate strategies. Local luminance and contrast masking are used to estimate detection-based perceived distortion in high-quality images, whereas changes in the local statistics of spatial-frequency components are used to estimate appearance-based perceived distortion in low-quality images. We show that a combination of these two measures can perform well in predicting subjective ratings of image quality.

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References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Most apparent distortion: a dual strategy for full-reference image quality assessment

TL;DR: A quality assessment method (MAD: Most Apparent Distortion) is presented which attempts to explicitly model these two separate strategies, local luminance and contrast masking and changes in the local statistics of spatial-frequency components, which are used to estimate appearance-based perceived distortion in low-quality images.
Journal ArticleDOI

A patch-based structural masking model with an application to compression

TL;DR: The results reveal that the standard model of masking does not generalize across image type; rather, a proper model should be coupled with a classification scheme which can adapt the model parameters based on the type of content contained in local image patches.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Suprathreshold image compression based on contrast allocation and global precedence

TL;DR: This paper presents a visually lossy wavelet image compression algorithm based on contrast allocations and visual global precedence: subbands are quantized such that the distortions in the reconstructed image exhibit specific root-mean squared contrast ratios, and such that edge structure is preserved across scale-space, with a preference for global spatial scales.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Image quality measurement using the Haar wavelet

TL;DR: In this paper, the Haar wavelet was used to model the space-frequency localization property of human visual system (HVS) and it was shown that the physical contrast in different resolutions can be easily represented in terms of transform coefficients.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Visual quality assessment using a contrast gain control model

S. Winkler
TL;DR: A quality metric for color video which is based on a recent contrast gain control model of the human visual system is presented, used to assess the quality of MPEG-coded sequences and exhibits a behavior that is consistent with subjective ratings.
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