High-Resolution Single-Pixel Imaging of Spatially Sparse Objects: Real-Time Imaging in the Near-Infrared and Visible Wavelength Ranges Enhanced with Iterative Processing or Deep Learning
AUTHORS:
Stojek R., Pastuszczak A., Wróbel P., Cwojdzińska M., Sobczak K., Kotyński R.
ABSTRACT:
We demonstrate high-resolution single-pixel imaging (SPI) in the visible and near-infrared wavelength ranges using an SPI framework that incorporates a novel, dedicated sampling scheme and a reconstruction algorithm optimized for the rapid imaging of highly sparse scenes at the native digital micromirror device (DMD) resolution of 1024 × 768. The reconstruction algorithm consists of two stages. In the first stage, the vector of SPI measurements is multiplied by the generalized inverse of the measurement matrix. In the second stage, we compare two reconstruction approaches: one based on an iterative algorithm and the other on a trained neural network. The neural network outperforms the iterative method when the object resembles the training set, though it lacks the generality of the iterative approach. For images captured at a compression of 0.41 percent, corresponding to a measurement rate of 6.8 Hz with a DMD operating at 22 kHz, the typical reconstruction time on a desktop with a medium-performance GPU is comparable to the image acquisition rate. This allows the proposed SPI method to support high-resolution dynamic SPI in a variety of applications, using a standard SPI architecture with a DMD modulator operating at its native resolution and bandwidth, and enabling the real-time processing of the measured data with no additional delay on a standard desktop PC.
Sensors, 2024, vol. 24(24), art. 8139, doi: 10.3390/s24248139
Originally published on - Dec. 23, 2024, 7:21 a.m.
Last update on - Dec. 23, 2024, 7:24 a.m.
Publisher - Sekretariat IGF