Talks
Images are 2D signals, and should be processed as such — this is the common belief in the image processing community. Is it truly the case? Around thirty years ago, some researchers suggested to convert images into 1D signals, so as to harness well-developed 1D tools such as adaptive-filtering and Kalman- estimation techniques. These attempts resulted with poorly performing algorithms, strengthening the above belief. Why should we force unnatural causality between spatially ordered pixels? Indeed, why? In this talk I will present a conversion of images into 1D signals that leads to state-of-the-art results in series of applications – denoising, inpainting, compression, and more. The core idea in our work is that there exists a permutation of the image pixels that carries in it most of the “spatial content”, and this ordering is within reach, even if the image is corrupted. We expose this permutation and use it in order to process the image as if it is a one-dimensional signal, treating successfully a series of image processing problems.