Optimizing Multiple Feature Types for Image Inpainting in the Linear and Nonlinear Setting
Abstract
Inpainting-based compression stores a carefully optimized subset of the full image data and reconstructs the missing data by inpainting. The quality of these lossy codecs depends decisively on the stored data. So far, these data consist almost exclusively of pixel locations along with their grayscale or color values. In the present paper, we present a general theory and a practical framework that allows to incorporate arbitrary features which can be described by linear or nonlinear equations. Th...
Description / Details
Inpainting-based compression stores a carefully optimized subset of the full image data and reconstructs the missing data by inpainting. The quality of these lossy codecs depends decisively on the stored data. So far, these data consist almost exclusively of pixel locations along with their grayscale or color values. In the present paper, we present a general theory and a practical framework that allows to incorporate arbitrary features which can be described by linear or nonlinear equations. This includes e.g. derivatives of arbitrary order or local integrals. Our features can be combined with linear or nonlinear inpainting operators. Moreover, we present an algorithm that automatically optimizes the location and the type of the selected feature. The approach of allowing different types of optimized features turns inpainting-based compression into a more general, versatile and powerful paradigm. Our experiments report a consistent quality gain when increasing the number of feature types from 1 to 5. With the same amount of stored data, the average peak signal-to-noise improvement is 2.76 dB for harmonic (homogeneous diffusion) inpainting, and 1.82 dB for edge-enhancing diffusion inpainting.
Source: arXiv:2606.16581v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.16581v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2606.16581v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.16581v1
Please sign in to join the discussion.
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!
Jun 16, 2026
Biomedical Engineering
Engineering
0