4.7 Article

Fast Multi-Grid Methods for Minimizing Curvature Energies

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING
Volume 32, Issue -, Pages 1716-1731

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TIP.2023.3251024

Keywords

Minimization; Computational modeling; Image restoration; Image reconstruction; Convergence; Surface treatment; Surface reconstruction; Mean curvature; gaussian curvature; multi-grid method; domain decomposition method; image denoising; image reconstruction

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In this paper, a fast multi-grid algorithm is proposed for minimizing both mean curvature and Gaussian curvature energy functionals without sacrificing accuracy for efficiency. Numerical experiments demonstrate the superiority of this method in preserving geometric structures and fine details.
The geometric high-order regularization methods such as mean curvature and Gaussian curvature, have been intensively studied during the last decades due to their abilities in preserving geometric properties including image edges, corners, and contrast. However, the dilemma between restoration quality and computational efficiency is an essential roadblock for high-order methods. In this paper, we propose fast multi-grid algorithms for minimizing both mean curvature and Gaussian curvature energy functionals without sacrificing accuracy for efficiency. Unlike the existing approaches based on operator splitting and the Augmented Lagrangian method (ALM), no artificial parameters are introduced in our formulation, which guarantees the robustness of the proposed algorithm. Meanwhile, we adopt the domain decomposition method to promote parallel computing and use the fine-to-coarse structure to accelerate convergence. Numerical experiments are presented on image denoising, CT, and MRI reconstruction problems to demonstrate the superiority of our method in preserving geometric structures and fine details. The proposed method is also shown effective in dealing with large-scale image processing problems by recovering an image of size $1024\times 1024$ within 40s, while the ALM-based method requires around 200s.

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