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Calibrating Denoisers Using J-Invariance#
In this example, we show how to find an optimally calibrated version of any denoising algorithm.
The calibration method is based on the noise2self algorithm of [1].
See also
More details about the method are given in the full tutorial Full tutorial on calibrating Denoisers Using J-Invariance.
Calibrating a wavelet denoiser
import numpy as np
from matplotlib import pyplot as plt
from skimage.data import chelsea
from skimage.restoration import calibrate_denoiser, denoise_wavelet
from skimage.util import img_as_float, random_noise
from functools import partial
# rescale_sigma=True required to silence deprecation warnings
_denoise_wavelet = partial(denoise_wavelet, rescale_sigma=True)
image = img_as_float(chelsea())
sigma = 0.3
noisy = random_noise(image, var=sigma ** 2)
# Parameters to test when calibrating the denoising algorithm
parameter_ranges = {'sigma': np.arange(0.1, 0.3, 0.02),
'wavelet': ['db1', 'db2'],
'convert2ycbcr': [True, False],
'channel_axis': [-1]}
# Denoised image using default parameters of `denoise_wavelet`
default_output = denoise_wavelet(noisy, channel_axis=-1, rescale_sigma=True)
# Calibrate denoiser
calibrated_denoiser = calibrate_denoiser(noisy,
_denoise_wavelet,
denoise_parameters=parameter_ranges)
# Denoised image using calibrated denoiser
calibrated_output = calibrated_denoiser(noisy)
fig, axes = plt.subplots(1, 3, sharex=True, sharey=True, figsize=(15, 5))
for ax, img, title in zip(
axes,
[noisy, default_output, calibrated_output],
['Noisy Image', 'Denoised (Default)', 'Denoised (Calibrated)']
):
ax.imshow(img)
ax.set_title(title)
ax.set_yticks([])
ax.set_xticks([])
plt.show()
Clipping input data to the valid range for imshow with RGB data ([0..1] for floats or [0..255] for integers).
Total running time of the script: (0 minutes 2.252 seconds)