Deeply Recursive Low- and High-Frequency Fusing Networks for Single Image Super-Resolution.

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Abstract

With the development of researches on single image super-resolution (SISR) based on convolutional neural networks (CNN), the quality of recovered images has been remarkably promoted. Since then, many deep learning-based models have been proposed, which have outperformed the traditional SISR algorithms. According to the results of extensive experiments, the feature representations of the model can be enhanced by increasing the depth and width of the network, which can ultimately improve the image reconstruction quality. However, a larger network generally consumes more computational and memory resources, making it difficult to train the network and increasing the prediction time. In view of the above problems, a novel deeply-recursive low- and high-frequency fusing network (DRFFN) for SISR tasks is proposed in this paper, which adopts the structure of parallel branches to extract the low- and high-frequency information of the image, respectively. The different complexities of the branches can reflect the frequency characteristic of the diverse image information. Moreover, an effective channel-wise attention mechanism based on variance (VCA) is designed to make the information distribution of each feature map more reasonably with different variances. Owing to model structure (i.e., cascading recursive learning of recursive units), DRFFN and DRFFN-L are very compact, where the weights are shared by all convolutional recursions. Comprehensive benchmark evaluations in standard benchmark datasets well demonstrate that DRFFN outperforms the most existing models and has achieved competitive, quantitative, and visual results.

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