论文标题
通过物理驱动的深神经网络进行实用的单发相检索
Towards Practical Single-shot Phase Retrieval with Physics-Driven Deep Neural Network
论文作者
论文摘要
相位检索(PR)是从其仅傅立叶强度测量中恢复复杂值信号的长期挑战,由于其在数字成像中的广泛应用,引起了相当大的关注。最近,开发了基于深度学习的方法,这些方法在单发PR中取得了成功。这些方法需要一个单一的傅立叶强度测量,而无需对测量数据施加任何其他约束。然而,由于PR问题的输入和输出域之间存在很大的差异,香草深神经网络(DNN)并没有提供良好的性能。物理知识的方法试图将傅立叶强度测量结果纳入提高重建精度的迭代方法。但是,它需要一个冗长的计算过程,并且仍然无法保证准确性。此外,这些方法中的许多方法都在模拟数据上工作,这些数据忽略了一些常见问题,例如饱和度和实用光学PR系统中的量化错误。在本文中,提出了一种新型的物理驱动的多尺度DNN结构,称为PPRNET。与其他基于深度学习的PR方法类似,PPRNET仅需要一个傅立叶强度测量。物理驱动的是,网络被指导遵循不同尺度的傅立叶强度测量,以提高重建精度。 PPRNET具有前馈结构,可以端到端训练。因此,它比传统物理驱动的PR方法更快,更准确。进行了实用光学平台上的大量模拟和实验。结果证明了所提出的PPRNET比传统的基于基于学习的PR方法的优势和实用性。
Phase retrieval (PR), a long-established challenge for recovering a complex-valued signal from its Fourier intensity-only measurements, has attracted considerable attention due to its widespread applications in digital imaging. Recently, deep learning-based approaches were developed that achieved some success in single-shot PR. These approaches require a single Fourier intensity measurement without the need to impose any additional constraints on the measured data. Nevertheless, vanilla deep neural networks (DNN) do not give good performance due to the substantial disparity between the input and output domains of the PR problems. Physics-informed approaches try to incorporate the Fourier intensity measurements into an iterative approach to increase the reconstruction accuracy. It, however, requires a lengthy computation process, and the accuracy still cannot be guaranteed. Besides, many of these approaches work on simulation data that ignore some common problems such as saturation and quantization errors in practical optical PR systems. In this paper, a novel physics-driven multi-scale DNN structure dubbed PPRNet is proposed. Similar to other deep learning-based PR methods, PPRNet requires only a single Fourier intensity measurement. It is physics-driven that the network is guided to follow the Fourier intensity measurement at different scales to enhance the reconstruction accuracy. PPRNet has a feedforward structure and can be end-to-end trained. Thus, it is much faster and more accurate than the traditional physics-driven PR approaches. Extensive simulations and experiments on a practical optical platform were conducted. The results demonstrate the superiority and practicality of the proposed PPRNet over the traditional learning-based PR methods.