Self-supervised Learning-based Reconstruction of High-resolution 4D Light Fields

Abstract

Hand-held light field (LF) cameras often exhibit low spatial resolution due to the inherent trade-off between spatial and angular dimensions. Existing supervised learning-based LF spatial super-resolution (SR) methods, which rely on pre-defined image degradation models, struggle to overcome the domain gap between the training phase -- where LFs with natural resolution are used as ground truth -- and the inference phase, which aims to reconstruct higher-resolution LFs, especially when applied to real-world data.To address this challenge, this paper introduces a novel self-supervised learning-based method for LF spatial SR, which can produce higher spatial resolution LF images than originally captured ones without pre-defined image degradation models. The self-supervised method incorporates a hybrid LF imaging prototype, a real-world hybrid LF dataset, and a self-supervised LF spatial SR framework. The prototype makes reference image pairs between low-resolution central-view sub-aperture images and high-resolution (HR) images. The self-supervised framework consists of a well-designed LF spatial SR network with hybrid input, a central-view synthesis network with an HR-aware loss that enables side-view sub-aperture images to learn high-frequency information from the only HR central view reference image, and a backward degradation network with an epipolar-plane image gradient loss to preserve LF parallax structures. Extensive experiments on both simulated and real-world datasets demonstrate the significant superiority of our approach over state-of-the-art ones in reconstructing higher spatial resolution LF images without pre-defined degradation.

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