AI Article Synopsis

  • Low-light image enhancement (LLIE) aims to improve poorly lit images, but current methods struggle to fully use valuable positional and frequency information from the images.
  • The proposed HPCDNet network combines hybrid positional coding with self-attention to enhance spatial information and incorporates frequency domain recovery techniques to better restore lost details.
  • Experiments show that HPCDNet significantly improves visibility, contrast, and color quality in low-light images while preserving important details and textures compared to existing methods.

Article Abstract

Low-light image enhancement (LLIE) improves lighting to obtain natural normal-light images from images captured under poor illumination. However, existing LLIE methods do not effectively utilize positional and frequency domain image information. To address this limitation, we proposed an end-to-end low-light image enhancement network called HPCDNet. HPCDNet uniquely integrates a hybrid positional coding technique into the self-attention mechanism by appending hybrid positional codes to the query and key, which better retains spatial positional information in the image. The hybrid positional coding can adaptively emphasize important local structures to improve modeling of spatial dependencies within low-light images. Meanwhile, frequency domain image information lost under low-light is recovered via discrete wavelet and cosine transforms. The resulting two frequency domain feature types are weighted and merged using a dual-attention module. More effective use of frequency domain information enhances the network's ability to recreate details, improving visual quality of enhanced low-light images. Experiments demonstrated that our approach can heighten visibility, contrast and color properties of low-light images while better preserving details and textures than previous techniques.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/mbe.2024085DOI Listing

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