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Modified Adaptive Gaussian Filter for Removal of Salt and Pepper Noise

  • Li, Zuoyong (Department of Computer Science, Minjiang University) ;
  • Tang, Kezong (School of Information Engineering, Jingdezhen Ceramic Institute) ;
  • Cheng, Yong (School of Communication Engineering, Nanjing Institute of Technology) ;
  • Chen, Xiaobo (Automotive Engineering Research Institute, Jiangsu University) ;
  • Zhou, Chongbo (School of Physics and Engineering, Qufu Normal University)
  • Received : 2015.03.25
  • Accepted : 2015.07.09
  • Published : 2015.08.31

Abstract

Adaptive Gaussian filter (AGF) is a recently developed switching filter to remove salt and pepper noise. AGF first directly identifies pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 as noise pixels, and then only restored noise pixels using a Gaussian filter with adaptive variance based on the estimated noise density. AGF usually achieves better denoising effect in comparison with other filters. However, AGF still fails to obtain good denoising effect on images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, due to its severe false alarm in its noise detection stage. To alleviate this issue, a modified version of AGF is proposed in this paper. Specifically, the proposed filter first performs noise detection via an image block based noise density estimation and sequential noise density guided rectification on the noise detection result of AGF. Then, a modified Gaussian filter with adaptive variance and window size is used to restore the detected noise pixels. The proposed filter has been extensively evaluated on two representative grayscale images and the Berkeley image dataset BSDS300 with 300 images. Experimental results showed that the proposed filter achieved better denoising effect over the state-of-the-art filters, especially on images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255.

Keywords

1. Introduction

Salt and pepper noise is a common image impulse noise, which is usually generated by bit errors during image acquisition and transmission [1-4]. Salt and pepper noise is one of the main factors causing image contamination and quality deterioration. Each noise pixel has a gray level, either 0 or 255, in an 8-bit image. Noise pixels bring great difficulty for image analysis such as edge detection [5], because noise pixel has similar large gradient value with true edge pixel due to the large differences from its neighboring pixels. Removal of salt and pepper noise is still of great importance to image denoising.

During the past several decades, many filters have been developed to remove salt and pepper noise. These filters can be divided into two categories, i.e., conventional filters [6-8] and switching filters [9-18]. Conventional filters perform image filtering on each pixel, that is, they restore each pixel with a newly estimated gray level. The undesirable filtering on noise-free pixels easily generates blurry image details. Median filter [1] is a representative of conventional filters. It restores each pixel with the median of gray levels in current filtering window. However, when noise density is high, the number of noise pixels may be greater than that of noise-free pixels in a filtering window. In this case, the median value chosen by the median filter is also a noise pixel. Increasing filtering window usually better suppresses severe noise. However, a large filtering window is prone to cause more blurriness. To alleviate this issue, many modified median filters [7-8] have been developed. For example, adaptive median filter (AM) [8] automatically determines filtering window size according to the content of local patch.

Switching filters [9-18] divide image denoising task into two stages, i.e., noise detection and noise restoration. The noise detection stage detects salt and pepper noise pixels. The noise restoration stage restores the detected noise pixels with newly estimated gray levels. Existing switching filters mainly utilize gray level extremes, directionality or their combinations to detect noise pixels. For examples, modified decision based unsymmetric trimmed median filter (UTM) [12], effective restoration method (ERM) [13], adaptive Gaussian filter (AGF) [14] and decision-based coupled window median filter (DBCWMF) [15] directly identify pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 as noise pixels. Differing from UTM ERM, AGF and DBCWMF, switching median filter with boundary discriminative noise detection (BDND) [16] divides gray levels of a patch into three intervals, and identifies pixels of gray levels in the left or right intervals as noise pixels in two noise detection stages with different patch sizes. Switching-based adaptive weighted mean filter (SAWM) [17] and directional weighted median filter (DWM) [18] respectively define weighted directional gray level differences, and use the minimum difference on different directions to identify noise pixels. In essence, the minimum directional gray level difference depicts directionality of central pixel in a local patch, i.e., whether the central pixel is located on an edge. Two modified versions (MDWM [19] and MDWF [20]) of DWM employ both gray level extremes and the directionality to identify noise pixels.

For noise restoration, existing switching filters usually use the mean or median variant of filtering window with fixed or adaptive size to restore detected noise pixels. For examples, UTM [12] restores each noise pixel by the mean or median variant of its 3×3 filtering window. BDND [16] restores each noise pixel by the median of remaining neighbors excluding noise in its filtering window with adaptive size. DWM [18] restores each noise pixel by the weighted median of its filtering window. MDWM [19] restores each noise pixel by the weighted median of neighbors without gray levels 0 and 255 on the estimated edge direction of its filtering window. MDWF [20] adaptively restores each noise pixel by the weighted mean of its recursive or non-recursive filtering window. SAWM [17] restores each noise pixel by the weighted mean of adaptive filtering window. ERM [13] restores each noise pixel by the gray level mean of noise-free pixels in its filtering window, where the size of filtering window is adaptively determined according to the ratio of noise pixel number to the total pixel number in the whole image. AGF [14] restores each noise pixel with the weighted mean of 9×9 filtering window, where the weights are defined by a Gaussian filter with adaptive variance. For each noise pixel, DBCWMF [15] first recursively extends its filtering window until noise-free pixels emerge in the filtering window or the filtering window size is equal to 9×9. Then, if there are noise-free pixels in the filtering window, the median of those noise-free pixels is taken as filtering output, otherwise, the mean of 3×3 filtering window is chosen as the filtering output. In fact, after detecting noise pixels in an image, the subsequent restoration process is similar with image inpainting technique [21-23], because both image denoising and image inpainting usually aim to restore the corrupted pixels by using the uncorrupted neighboring pixels.

Among existing switching filters, AGF usually achieves the best performance in terms of image denoising effect and computational complexity. However, AGF has two main limitations: 1) AGF misclassifies noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 as noise pixels, thus generating severe false alarm on images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 in noise detection; 2) In the process of noise restoration, AGF uses a Gaussian filter with adaptive variance and fixed filtering window size. The adaptive variance will be affected by severe false alarm in noise detection. In addition, the fixed filtering window is adverse to image restoration. To alleviate both limitations of AGF, we present a modified adaptive Gaussian filter. The proposed filter has three main contributions in comparison with AGF: 1) The proposed filter develops an image block-based noise density estimation method to more accurately estimate noise density of an image; 2) The proposed filter presents a noise detection rectification method to improve the accuracy of noise detection; 3) The proposed filter presents a scheme of adaptively determining the filtering window size to enhance image restoration effect. Experimental results on two representative grayscale images and Berkeley image dataset BSDS300 with 300 images showed that the proposed filter outperformed the state-of-the-art filters, especially on images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255.

The rest of this paper is organized as follows. Section 2 briefly introduces existing adaptive Gaussian filter (AGF) closely related to the proposed filter, and analyzes its advantages and limitations. Section 3 describes theory and implementation of the proposed filter. Experimental results are reported in Section 4. And this paper concludes in Section 5.

 

2. Existing adaptive Gaussian filter (AGF)

The proposed filter is mainly inspired to remedy the deficiencies of existing adaptive Gaussian filter (AGF) [14] in noise detection and restoration. During exploring existing switching filters, we found that AGF usually has better image denoising performance than other filters. However, AGF still has its limitations. This section will review AGF, and analyze its advantages and limitations.

2.1. Noise detection

For a given pixel pi, j of gray level fi, j, AGF directly identifies noise pixels according to fi, j. If fi,j is equal to 0 or 255, AGF judges pi, j as a noise pixel, otherwise, AGF judges pi, j as a noise-free pixel. The simple noise detection scheme lets miss detection to be 0. However, it erroneously detects noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 as noise pixels, thus generating severe false alarm on images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255. The detection error lets those noise-free pixels undergo undesirable filtering operation, which may cause image blurriness. In addition, inaccuracy of noise detection caused by false alarm will affect accuracy of noise density estimation and adaptive variance determination in the Gaussian filter for noise restoration.

2.2. Noise restoration

AGF restores each noise pixel with a weighted mean of filtering window with fixed size, where the weights are defined by a Gaussian filter with adaptive variance. The detailed process of noise restoration in AGF is as follows:

(1) For a detected noise pixel pi, j, let Ω denote the ω×ω filtering window centered at pi, j, where ω is empirically set to 9.

(2) Construct a new set U after excluding noise pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 in Ω, and take the weighted mean of pixels in U as the restored gray level, ri,j, of pi, j, i.e.,

where fs, t and αs, t denote the gray level and the weight of ps, t. The weight αs, t is defined by a classical Gaussian function as

where (i, j) and (s, t) respectively denote the coordinates of pi, j and its neighboring pixel ps, t in the whole image. In addition, the parameter σ is empirically defined as

where noise density is estimated to be the ratio between the number of detected noise pixels and the total number of pixels in the whole image.

When restoring a noise pixel, AGF considers space information of neighboring pixels in its filtering window more adequately in comparison with other filters. Studies on natural image statistics [24-26] show that the correlation between two pixels in a local patch decreases with their distance. A pixel is usually more similar to its nearer neighbors than those neighbors far from it. Hence, when restoring a noise pixel, those pixels near it should contribute more than those far from it. Based on this consideration, AGF adopts a Gaussian function with adaptive variance to effectively model unequal weights of noise-free neighbors around being restored noise pixel. As is well known, Gaussian filter is a powerful estimation kernel [27], which is widely used in scale-space representation [28], spatial filtering [29] and Gaussian noise reduction [30].

However, the adaptive variation σ2 of the Gaussian function defined in Eq. (2) depends on noise density estimation. Unfortunately, accurate noise density estimation will be affected by false alarm on noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255. The detection error on noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 not only affects calculation of each noise-free neighbor’s weight during image restoration, but also loses useful pixel information due to erroneous exclusion of those noise-free neighbors of gray levels 0 and 255. On the other hand, the filtering window with fixed size in AGF is not reasonable for variable noise density. Adaptive variance of the Gaussian function used in AGF can only remedy the deficiency of fixed filtering window size to some extent. However, the size of 9×9 used in AGF may be not large enough to guarantee that there is noise-free pixels in the filtering window when noise density is high. Once U is a null set in Eq. (1), the calculation of restored gray level will be invalid. Conversely, the usage of too large filtering window may cause the loss of localization. Therefore, adaptive filtering window size is a good choice for image restoration.

 

3. The proposed filter

To remedy the deficiencies of AGF [14] in noise detection and restoration, a modified adaptive Gaussian filter is proposed in this paper. The contributions of the proposed filter are as follows: 1) The proposed filter presents a noise density estimation method, and combines it with image thresholding technique to rectify noise detection error of AGF on noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255; 2) The proposed filter presents a scheme of adaptively determining the filtering window size to enhance image restoration effect.

3.1. Noise detection

The proposed filter first estimates noise density via an image block based scheme. Then, the estimated noise density guides sequential noise detection. The detailed process of noise density estimation is as follows:

(1) Respectively divide rows and columns of an image into w parts, and accordingly divide an image into w×w blocks. During this process, if the last part has not the same rows or columns as other parts, we extend the image through mirror-reflecting by enough rows or columns.

(2) Calculate the probability of pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 in each block, and construct a vector

(3) Sort all elements in into ascending order and form a vector called

(4) Estimate noise density of the image according to parity of the image block number w2. Specifically, the image noise density is defined as the mean value of middle k elements in , where k and w2 have the same parity for the symmetry of taking k elements. The noise density estimation is formulated as

The choice of w and k will be discussed in Section 4.1.

After estimating the image noise density, sequential noise detection process is as follows. We use a binary matrix B to record noise detection result, where 1 and 0 denote noise pixel and noise-free pixel, respectively.

(1) Initialize all elements of B to zeros, like AGF [14], detect pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 as noise pixels, and set their corresponding elements in B to ones.

(2) If the estimated noise density De defined in Eq. (4) is nearest to one of the first 6 noise densities among {10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%}, continue the following steps, otherwise, the noise detection process stops.

(3) Acquire two image thresholding results

where 1 and 0 denote object pixel and background pixel, respectively.

(4) Search object pixels in seg0 and seg255, find out each connected component Ci composed of object pixels under 8-connected graph topology, and construct a set C={Ci, i = 1,... m}, where m is the number of connected components.

(5) Remove those components composed of possible noise pixels, and construct a new set

where ni is the number of pixels in Ci, and α is a parameter, the choice of which will be discussed in Section 4.1.

(6) Rectify the noise detection result obtained in the first step, i.e., setting B as

The above noise detection rectification is based on the following considerations: 1) Gray level of a salt and pepper noise pixel can only be 0 or 255; 2) When noise density is not too high, the pixel number of a connected component composed of true noise pixels adhered together should be smaller than that of an image block composed of noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 or 255. The above noise detection rectification is useful for reducing false alarm on images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255.

3.2. Noise restoration

The proposed filter first adaptively determines filtering window size according to the content of local patch. Then, the noise restoration scheme of AGF [14] is used to restore detected noise pixels. The detailed process of noise restoration is as follows:

(1) For a given noise pixel pi, j, let wp×wp denote the size of local window centered at pi, j, initialize wp=3 and iteratively set wp=wp+2 until Nuc≥2 or wp≥Wmax, where Nuc denotes the number of detected noise-free (uncorrupted) pixels in current window, and the choice of Wmax will be discussed in Section 4.1.

(2) Acquire the wp×wp filtering window Ω centered at pi, j, construct a set U after excluding detected noise pixels in Ω. Then, we take the weighted mean of pixels in U as the restored gray level of pi, j according to Eq. (1) defined by AGF. Note that, if U is a null set, we reset U=Ω to guarantee the validity of Eq. (1). Differing from AGF, the parameter σ in Eq. (2) is redefined as

where De is the noise density estimated by the proposed method in Eq. (4).

 

4. Experimental results

To evaluate the performance of the proposed filter, we performed extensive experiments on two representative grayscale images and 300 natural images from the Berkeley dataset BSDS3001 Each noise filter designed for a noisy grayscale image can be easily applied to a noisy color image by applying it to RGB color components separately and merging denoising results of three components as final denoising result of the color image. Therefore, the proposed filter only focuses on noisy grayscale images, and each color image in BSDS300 was converted into grayscale image by using the MATLAB function “rgb2gray”, while keeping the image size unchanged.

The proposed filter is first qualitatively compared with the state-of-the-art salt and pepper noise filters, i.e., AM [8], BDND [16], UTM [12], SAWM [17], MDWF [20], ERM [13], DBCWMF [15] and AGF [14] on two representative grayscale images. Then, image denoising results on the BSDS300 dataset are quantitatively evaluated by two common measures, i.e., peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) [31] and MSSIM (mean structural similarity) [32]:

In Eq. (11), N is the total number of image pixels, ri, j and xi, j denote the gray levels of pi, j in the restored image and the original noise-free image, respectively. In Eq. (12), X and Y are the original noise-free image and the restored image, xj and yj are the image contents at the j-th local window, M is the number of local windows, μxj and μyj are the means of xj and yj, σxj and σyj are their standard deviations, σxjyj is the covariance of xj and yj, C1 and C2 are free parameters. The value of MSSIM is between 0 and 1. Higher PSNR and MSSIM indicate better denoising effect.

In our experiments, the maximum window size of AM was set to 39. The iteration number of MDWF was set to 10. We ran MDWF with different filtering windows of 3×3, 5×5, 7×7, 9×9, 11×11, 13×13, 15×15 on each image, and chosen the result corresponding to the highest PSNR value as the final result. BDND, UTM, SAWM, ERM, DBCWMF and AGF follow their original parameter setting. All testing samples are 8-bit grayscale images. To make each image pixel visit its complete filtering window, we extended four boundaries of an input image through mirror-reflecting to ensure enough pixels.

4.1. Impact of the parameters

The proposed filter has four parameters, i.e., w, k, α and wmax. The first two parameters (i.e., w and k) are used in our noise density estimation. To evaluate the impact of both parameters on the accuracy of noise density estimation, we specifically recorded average noise density estimation errors obtained by applying the proposed method with different w and k on the BSDS300 dataset corrupted by manually added salt and pepper noise under 9 noise densities varying from 10% to 90% with an incremental step of 10%, where w is selected from 3 to 12. Considering the symmetry of taking k elements in , when w2 is odd, k is also odd selected from {1, 3, 5, 7, 9, w2}, otherwise, k is even from {2, 4, 6, 8, 10, w2}. In fact, taking k=w2 elements indicates calculating the mean of . When w is odd, taking k=1 element indicates calculating the median of . When w is even, taking k=2 elements indicates calculating the median of . Experimental results under different combinations of w and k are listed in Table 1. The lowest estimation error (0.00130) was obtained with w=7 and k=9. Hence, w and k are set to 7 and 9 in subsequent experiments, respectively.

Table 1.Average noise density estimation errors under different combinations of w and k

The third parameter α is used in our noise detection stage. It controls sensitivity of distinguishing image blocks composed of noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255 from those blocks composed of noise pixels adhered together. The parameter affects the effectiveness of noise detection rectification on noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255. To evaluate the impact of α on noise detection, we specifically recorded average number of erroneously detected pixels obtained by applying our method with different α on all the images from BSDS300 under 9 noise densities from 10% to 90% with an incremental step of 10%, where α ranges from 100 to 900 with an incremental step of 100. Average noise detection errors (pixel numbers) are listed in Table 2. In addition, to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed noise detection rectification, the error of noise detection without rectification operation is also listed in Table 2. In fact, the noise detection without rectification is just the scheme of AGF. From Table 2, one can observe that: 1) when noise density is higher than 60%, the noise detection errors obtained by the proposed filter with all α are higher than the error by AGF. This shows that when noise density is higher than 60%, noise detection rectification should be canceled, because it generates bad effect on noise detection. 2) For average values of the errors corresponding to the first six noise densities, the lowest error (146) was obtained with α=500. Hence, α is set to 500, and noise detection rectification is only performed when noise density is nearest to one of the first 6 noise densities among {10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%} in our experiments.

Table 2.Average noise detection error (pixel number) under different α

The fourth parameter Wmax indicates the maximum permitted filtering window size when iteratively enlarging filtering window for finding noise-free neighboring pixels in the proposed noise restoration stage. To discuss the choice of Wmax in detail, we first enlarged the filtering window for each noise pixel in each image until there are more than one noise-free neighbor, and denoted the size of current filtering window as Smax×Smax. Then, we recorded Smax values of all noise pixels in each noisy image, and calculated the number of images whose noise pixels have corresponding Smax values. Experimental results on the BSDS300 dataset corrupted by salt and pepper noise of varying noise density are listed in Table 3. From Table 3, one can observe that when noise density is 90%, there are 300, 22, 15 and 10 noisy images have noise pixels corresponding to Smax=11, 21, 31 and 41, respectively.

Table 3.The number of images whose pixels needing different filtering window sizes (Smax)

To further evaluate the impact of Wmax on noise restoration, we took the 29 noisy images corresponding to Smax=41 as testing samples, and set Wmax to 11, 21, 31 and 41, respectively. Corresponding experimental results are listed in Table 4. Table 4 shows that average PSNR values obtained by the proposed filter with Wmax from {21, 31, 41} is higher than that by our filter with Wmax=11. At the same time, the proposed filter with Wmax from {21, 31, 41} have the same PSNR values, which is attributed to the usage of the weight defined by Eq. (2) in calculating filtering output of noise pixel. Eq. (2) is a classical Gaussian function, which defines the weight of weighted mean filter defined by Eq. (1). In fact, Eq. (1) can be understood as convolution operation of a Gaussian filtering template H and a local image window U excluding noise pixels, where H can be calculated by Eqs. (1)~(3). Of course, we can also use MATLAB function “fspecial” to generate H, where H under high noise density has more non-zero elements than H under low noise density, because noise density is related with σ in Eq. (3) and the function “fspecial” sets those elements lower than “eps×max(H(:))” to zeros due to their very small contributions for filtering output. When we set the size of H to 31×31 and 41×41, non-zero elements of H31×31 and H41×41 generated by “fspecial” under the highest noise density 100% only occupy 21 rows and 21 columns at the central location. In other words, H21×21, H31×31 and H41×41 generated by “fspecial” have the same non-zero elements, and these non-zero elements are centered at three templates. In this case, the filtering outputs as the convolution results of respectively using H21×21, H31×31 and H41×41 with U are the same. In summary, too small Wmax will affect image denoising effect when noise density is high, which is demonstrated by comparing PSNR values corresponding to Wmax =11 and Wmax =21 in Table 4. In addition, the proposed filter obtains the same PSNR value for Wmax>21 and Wmax =21, as demonstrated in Table 4. Large Wmax will add computational time. Therefore, Wmax is set to 21 in our experiments, and the choice of Wmax is regardless of image size.

Table 4.Average PSNR of 29 images obtained by the proposed filter with different Wmax

4.2. Qualitative comparison

To qualitatively compare image denoising effect of different filters, we chose two widely used 256×256 grayscale images as shown in Fig. 1 as testing samples, and both images are representatives with and without noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255. The maximum and minimum gray levels of the Lena image are 245 and 23, and there are no noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255. The maximum and minimum gray levels of the rice image are 254 and 0, and there are 3839 noise-free pixels of gray level 0. In our experiments, each image was corrupted by salt and pepper noise with varying noise density from 10% to 90% with an incremental step of 10%. To save space, Fig. 2 only shows the denoising results under three noise densities, i.e., 10%, 50% and 90%. For the Lena image with noise density 10%, there is no obvious visual difference among the denoising results of different filters. For other two noisy Lena images, AM, BDND and UTM obtain inferior denoising effect than other filters. The results of AM suffer severe blurriness. The results of BDND have a lot of white noise regions. The results of UTM have a number of white and black noise regions. The results of SAWM and MDWF suffer some blurriness, and the results of MDWF and ERM have some white and black noise regions. The results of AGF and DBCWMF under noise density 90% have several white noise regions and black noise regions, respectively. As compared with other filters, the proposed filter obtains better denoising effect, because our results do not have noise regions and preserve more image details.

Fig. 1.Two representative grayscale images and their histograms.

Fig. 2.Visual inspection of denoising results on two representative grayscale images under three noise densities, i.e., 10%, 50% and 90%. Columns 1-8: original images, results of AM [8], results of BDND [16], results of UTM [12], results of SAWM [17], results of MDWF [20], results of ERM [13], resul ts of DBCWMF [15], results of AGF [14], and results of the proposed filter.

For the rice image with noise density 10%, the result of SAWM has a number of black and white noise points. The results of BDND, UTM, ERM and AGF have some white noise regions. The rice boundaries obtained by AM are not smooth enough. MDWF, DBCWMF and the proposed filter obtain the best denoising effect. When noise density is 50%, the results of DBCWMF, AGF and the proposed filter have better visual effect than those of other filters. The results of BDND, UTM and SAWM have a number of white or black noise regions. The results of AM, MDWF and ERM have some white or black noise regions. When noise density is 90%, the results of BDND and UTM have severe noise. The results of AM, MDWF, DBCWMF and AGF have some noise regions. The result of SAWM does not have noise, but its rice boundaries are not smoother than AM, MDWF, DBCWMF, AGF and the proposed filter. The proposed filter achieves better denoising effect on the rice images under noise densities 50% and 90% in comparison with other filters, because our results do not have noise, and rice boundaries are more complete.

4.3. Quantitative comparison

To provide quantitative comparison of image denoising effect of different filters, we evaluated them on the BSDS300 dataset using two measures, i.e., PSNR and MSSIM. Each testing image was also randomly corrupted by salt and pepper noise with varying density from 10% to 90% with an incremental step of 10%. To more adequately compare denoising effects of different filters on images with and without noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, we specifically calculated average PSNR and MSSIM values on two types of images under each noise density, where the numbers of images belonging to both types are 138 and 162, respectively. Furthermore, we also recorded average PSNR and MSSIM values on the whole dataset.

Fig. 3 shows the box-whisker plots of PSNR and MSSIM. Furthermore, Fig. 4 shows the bar charts of average PSNR and MSSIM values obtained by different filters on three groups of images, i.e., images without noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, and the whole BSDS300 dataset. From Figs. 4 (a)-(d), it can be observed that the proposed filter and AGF obtain higher PSNR and MSSIM values than other filters on two types of images. For images without noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, the proposed filter obtains slightly higher PSNR and MSSIM values than AGF. For images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, the proposed filter achieves significant improvement in terms of PSNR and MSSIM in comparison with other filters, showing large superiority on this type of images. Figs. 4 (e)-(f) show that the proposed filter obtains the highest average PSNR and MSSIM values on the whole BSDS300 dataset, thus demonstrating better denoising effect than its counterparts.

Fig. 3.Box-whisker plots of average PSNR and MSSIM values obtained by applying AM [8], BDND 16[12], SAWM [17], MDWF [20], ERM [13], DBCWMF [15], AGF [14] and the proposed filter to three groups of images, i.e., (a)-(b): 162 images without noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, (c)-(d) 138 images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, and (e)-(f) 300 images from the BSDS300 dataset under 9 noise densities.

Fig. 4.Bar chart of the PSNR and MSSIM mean values obtained by applying AM [8], BDND [16], UTM [12], SAWM [17], MDWF [20], ERM [13], DBCWMF [15], AGF [14] and the proposed filter to three groups of images, i.e., (a)-(b): 162 images without noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, (c)-(d): 138 images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255, and (e)-(f): 300 images from the BSDS300 dataset under 9 noise densities.

4.4 Computational time

The computational time of the proposed filter is related with several factors such as image size and noise density. For example, the average total computational time is around 5s for the denoising of each noisy image with noise density 10% from the BSDS300 dataset on our Linux server with 1 CPU and 2G memory. To compare the computational efficiency of various filters, we specifically recorded their average computational time on BSDS300 under 9 noise densities. Experimental results are listed in Table 5. Table 5 shows that the proposed filter is faster than SAWM and MDWF, but is slower than other counterparts. Overall, the proposed filter achieves satisfactory image denoising results within reasonable computational time.

Table 5.Average computational time (in seconds) on BSDS300 under 9 noise densities

 

5. Conclusions

In this paper, we have proposed a modified adaptive Gaussian filter for the removal of salt and pepper noise. As compared with existing adaptive Gaussian filter (AGF), the proposed filter presents an image block based scheme to accurately estimate noise density of an image, and combines noise density estimation result and image thresholding results obtained by gray levels 0 and 255 to rectify the noise detection error of AGF. In addition, when restoring detected noise pixels, the proposed filter adopts adaptive filtering window size instead of empirically fixed window size in AGF. Experimental results on two representative grayscale images and the BSDS300 dataset showed that the proposed filter dramatically improved denoising effect in comparison with the state-of-the-art filters, especially on images with noise-free pixels of gray levels 0 and 255.

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