2007
DOI: 10.1117/12.715711
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Multiscale reconstruction for computational spectral imaging

Abstract: In this work we develop a spectral imaging system and associated reconstruction methods that have been designed to exploit the theory of compressive sensing. Recent work in this emerging field indicates that when the signal of interest is very sparse (i.e. zero-valued at most locations) or highly compressible in some basis, relatively few incoherent observations are necessary to reconstruct the most significant non-zero signal components. Conventionally, spectral imaging systems measure complete data cubes and… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
(46 reference statements)
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“…This relationship can be directed to the recent development of compressive sensing [42][43][44][45]. Further investigations along this line are highly desired.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This relationship can be directed to the recent development of compressive sensing [42][43][44][45]. Further investigations along this line are highly desired.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Traditionally, the coded aperture entries are obtained as realizations of a Bernoulli random variable, Hadamard matrices, S matrices [1], [4] and, cyclic S-matrices obtained as cyclic permutations of a codeword [5]. These types of random codes however, do not fully exploit the richness of compressed sensing theory.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Based on this basic principle, researchers have designed different spectrum sampling systems, with various optical implementations and system structures. We can classify them into branches according to their sampling and reconstruction strategies, including computed tomography (Descour and Dereniak, 1995), interferometry (Chao et al, 2005), coded aperture (Willett et al, 2007), and hybrid-camera systems (Ma et al, 2014). In addition, compressive sensing has recently drawn much attention in the computational imaging field.…”
Section: Spectral Dimensionmentioning
confidence: 99%