Non-blind optical degradation correction via frequency self-adaptive and finetune tactics

In mobile photography applications, limited volume constraints the diversity of optical design. In addition to the narrow space, the deviations introduced in mass production cause random bias to the real camera. In consequence, these factors introduce spatially varying aberration and stochastic degradation into the physical formation of an image. Many existing methods obtain excellent performance on one specific device but are not able to quickly adapt to mass production. To address this issue, we propose a frequency self-adaptive model to restore realistic features of the latent image. The restoration is mainly performed in the Fourier domain and two attention mechanisms are introduced to match the feature between Fourier and spatial domain. Our method applies a lightweight network, without requiring modification when the fields of view (FoV) changes. Considering the manufacturing deviations of a specific camera, we first pre-train a simulation-based model, then finetune it with additional manufacturing error, which greatly decreases the time and computational overhead consumption in implementation. Extensive results verify the promising applications of our technique for being integrated with the existing post-processing systems.

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