Speckle noise reduction via nonconvex high total variation approach
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1666177
DOI10.1155/2015/627417zbMath1395.94067OpenAlexW1968112329WikidataQ59119161 ScholiaQ59119161MaRDI QIDQ1666177
Publication date: 27 August 2018
Published in: Mathematical Problems in Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/627417
Image processing (compression, reconstruction, etc.) in information and communication theory (94A08)
Related Items
A Patch-Based Low-Rank Minimization Approach for Speckle Noise Reduction in Ultrasound Images, Second order total generalized variation for Speckle reduction in ultrasound images, Multiplicative noise removal based on the linear alternating direction method for a hybrid variational model, A new variational approach for restoring images with multiplicative noise, Total bending method for piecewise smoothing image denoising
Cites Work
- Enhancing sparsity by reweighted \(\ell _{1}\) minimization
- Probability density difference-based active contour for ultrasound image segmentation
- Removing multiplicative noise by Douglas-Rachford splitting methods
- A first-order primal-dual algorithm for convex problems with applications to imaging
- Fully smoothed \(\ell_1\)-\(TV\) models: bounds for the minimizers and parameter choice
- A New Total Variation Method for Multiplicative Noise Removal
- A Variational Approach to Removing Multiplicative Noise
- Iteratively reweighted least squares minimization for sparse recovery
- Geometric Level Set Methods in Imaging, Vision, and Graphics
- Speckle Reduction via Higher Order Total Variation Approach
- On $\ell_1$ Data Fitting and Concave Regularization for Image Recovery
- Iterative Weighted Maximum Likelihood Denoising With Probabilistic Patch-Based Weights
- Multiplicative Noise Removal Using Variable Splitting and Constrained Optimization
- Fast Nonconvex Nonsmooth Minimization Methods for Image Restoration and Reconstruction
- Total Generalized Variation
- Multiplicative Noise Removal Using L1 Fidelity on Frame Coefficients