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3-D Shape Estimation and Image Restoration: Exploiting Defocus and Motion-Blur
 
 
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3-D Shape Estimation and Image Restoration: Exploiting Defocus and Motion-Blur [Hardcover]

Paolo Favaro , Stefano Soatto

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"This book presents a framework for estimating three-dimensional (3D) shapes from defocused and motion-blurred images. The book systematically describes various problems involved in estimating 3D shapes, and provides solutions to these problems… The book is well-written, and is equipped with Matlab code that implements the estimators presented in the chapters… I recommend this book to engineers in image processing and computer vision. Readers will learn state-of-the-art methods for shape restoration." (Hsun-Hsien Chang, ACM Computing Reviews, Vol. 49 (9), September 2008)

Product Description

In the areas of image processing and computer vision, there is a particular need for software that can, given an unfocused or motion-blurred image, infer the three-dimensional shape of a scene. This book describes the analytical processes that go into designing such software, delineates the options open to programmers, and presents original algorithms. Written for readers with interests in image processing and computer vision and with backgrounds in engineering, science or mathematics, this highly practical text/reference is accessible to advanced students or those with a degree that includes basic linear algebra and calculus courses.

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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars gobbledygook, 11 Jan 2010
By a reader - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: 3-D Shape Estimation and Image Restoration: Exploiting Defocus and Motion-Blur (Hardcover)
I have gone through Chapter 4 and this chapter makes no sense to me. If you check the code in the back of the book you will find that they use equations that are not described in the text. There are two lines of code that, if deleted, radically alter their results. It's quite a coicidence that the two lines of code are of obvious theoretical and practical importance are somehow neglected in the text. The stuff that they do describe, sounds like technobabble gobbledygook.
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