Image Quality Assessment
Image Quality Assessment (IQA) aims to objectively measure the perceived quality of images, often by correlating automated metrics with human judgments. Current research focuses on developing robust, training-efficient methods, particularly for no-reference IQA (NR-IQA), employing architectures like transformers and convolutional neural networks, often incorporating techniques like contrastive learning and vision-language models. These advancements are crucial for various applications, including image processing, medical imaging, and the evaluation of AI-generated content, improving the reliability and efficiency of computer vision systems.
Papers
MANIQA: Multi-dimension Attention Network for No-Reference Image Quality Assessment
Sidi Yang, Tianhe Wu, Shuwei Shi, Shanshan Lao, Yuan Gong, Mingdeng Cao, Jiahao Wang, Yujiu Yang
Incorporating Semi-Supervised and Positive-Unlabeled Learning for Boosting Full Reference Image Quality Assessment
Yue Cao, Zhaolin Wan, Dongwei Ren, Zifei Yan, Wangmeng Zuo