2007 IEEE International Conference on Image Processing - San Antonio, Texas, U.S.A. - September 16-19, 2007

Technical Program

Paper Detail

Paper:WA-P4.11
Session:Object Recognition I / Interpolation and Superresolution
Time:Wednesday, September 19, 09:50 - 12:30
Presentation: Poster
Title: ON THE RESOLUTION LIMITS OF SUPERIMPOSED PROJECTION
Authors: Niranjan Damera-Venkata; Hewlett Packard Laboratories 
 Nelson Chang; Hewlett Packard Laboratories 
Abstract: Multi-projector super-resolution is the dual of multi-camera super-resolution. The goal of projector super-resolution is to produce a high resolution frame via superimposition of multiple low resolution subframes. Prior work claims that it is impossible to improve resolution via superimposed projection except in specialized circumstances. Rigorous analysis has been previously restricted to the special case of uniform display sampling, which reduces the problem to a simple shift-invariant deblurring. To understand the true behavior of superimposed projection as an inverse of classical camera super-resolution, one must consider the effects of non-uniform displacements between component subframes. In this paper, we resolve two fundamental theoretical questions concerning resolution enhancement via superimposed projection. First, we show that it is possible to reproduce frequencies that are well beyond the Nyquist limit of any of the component subframes. Second, we show that non-uniform sampling and pixel reconstruction functions impose fundamental limits on achievable resolution.



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