Title :
Neural network approaches to image compression
Author :
Dony, Robert D. ; Haykin, Simon
Author_Institution :
Commun. Res. Lab., McMaster Univ., Hamilton, Ont., Canada
fDate :
2/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper presents a tutor a overview of neural networks as signal processing tools for image compression. They are well suited to the problem of image compression due to their massively parallel and distributed architecture. Their characteristics are analogous to some of the features of our own visual system, which allow us to process visual information with much ease. For example, multilayer perceptions can be used as nonlinear predictors in differential pulse-code modulation (DPCM). Such predictors have been shown to increase the predictive gain relative to a linear predictor. Another active area of research is in the application of Hebbian learning to the extraction of principal components, which are the basis vectors for the optimal linear Karhunen-Loeve transform (KLT). These learning algorithms are iterative, have some computational advantages over standard eigendecomposition techniques, and can be made to adapt to changes in the input signal. Yet another model, the self-organizing feature map (SOFM), has been used with a great deal of success in the design of codebooks for vector quantization (VQ). The resulting codebooks are less sensitive to initial conditions than the standard LBG algorithm, and the topological ordering of the entries can be exploited to further increasing the coding efficiency and reducing the computational complexity
Keywords :
Hebbian learning; feedforward neural nets; image coding; iterative methods; multilayer perceptrons; self-organising feature maps; transforms; vector quantisation; DPCM; Hebbian learning; KLT; SOFM; codebooks; coding efficiency; differential pulse-code modulation; distributed architecture; human visual system; image compression; iterative algorithms; learning algorithms; massively parallel architecture; multilayer perceptions; neural network; nonlinear predictors; optimal linear Karhunen-Loeve transform; predictive gain; self-organizing feature map; signal processing tools; topological ordering; vector quantization; Data mining; Hebbian theory; Image coding; Karhunen-Loeve transforms; Neural networks; Nonhomogeneous media; Pulse modulation; Signal processing; Signal processing algorithms; Visual system;
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEEE