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Video Super-Resolution via Bidirectional Recurrent Convolutional Networks
Jul 11, 2018Author:
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Title: Video Super-Resolution via Bidirectional Recurrent Convolutional Networks

Authors: Huang, Y; Wang, W; Wang, L

Author Full Names: Huang, Yan; Wang, Wei; Wang, Liang

Source: IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PATTERN ANALYSIS AND MACHINE INTELLIGENCE, 40 (4):1015-1028; 10.1109/TPAMI.2017.2701380 APR 2018

Language: English

Abstract: Super resolving a low-resolution video, namely video super-resolution (SR), is usually handled by either single-image SR or multi-frame SR. Single-Image SR deals with each video frame independently, and ignores intrinsic temporal dependency of video frames which actually plays a very important role in video SR. Multi-Frame SR generally extracts motion information, e.g., optical flow, to model the temporal dependency, but often shows high computational cost. Considering that recurrent neural networks (RNNs) can model long-term temporal dependency of video sequences well, we propose a fully convolutional RNN named bidirectional recurrent convolutional network for efficient multi-frame SR. Different from vanilla RNNs, 1) the commonly-used full feedforward and recurrent connections are replaced with weight-sharing convolutional connections. So they can greatly reduce the large number of network parameters and well model the temporal dependency in a finer level, i.e., patch-based rather than frame-based, and 2) connections from input layers at previous timesteps to the current hidden layer are added by 3D feedforward convolutions, which aim to capture discriminate spatio-temporal patterns for short-term fast-varying motions in local adjacent frames. Due to the cheap convolutional operations, our model has a low computational complexity and runs orders of magnitude faster than other multi-frame SR methods. With the powerful temporal dependency modeling, our model can super resolve videos with complex motions and achieve well performance.

ISSN: 0162-8828

eISSN: 1939-3539

IDS Number: FY2ZU

Unique ID: WOS:000426687100018

PubMed ID: 28489532

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