matlabimage-processingwavelet

Applying MATLAB's idwt2 several times


I am using MATLAB to apply the Discrete Wavelet Transform on an image. I am applying it several times (3) in order to get a 3 level transform. I am using the dwt2 function provided by MATLAB in order to compress and idwt2 to make the decompression. The problem is that I do not know how to decompress several times, as in apply idwt2 several times to the previous received output, as it returns a matrix. Take for example:

x = idwt2(scaled3, vertical3, horizontal3, diagonal3, Lo_R, Ho_R);

How should idwt2 be applied to x?


Solution

  • Looking at the documentation for dwt2 and idwt2, it appears that you have 2 general options for reconstructing your multiply-decomposed images:

    Since it was a slow day, here's some code showing how to do this and what the results look like for each case...

    First, load a sample image and initialize some variables:

    load woman;              % Load image data
    nLevel = 3;              % Number of decompositions
    nColors = size(map, 1);  % Number of colors in colormap
    cA = cell(1, nLevel);    % Approximation coefficients
    cH = cell(1, nLevel);    % Horizontal detail coefficients
    cV = cell(1, nLevel);    % Vertical detail coefficients
    cD = cell(1, nLevel);    % Diagonal detail coefficients
    

    Now, apply the decompositions (in this case 3) and store the detail coefficient matrices from each step in a cell array:

    startImage = X;
    for iLevel = 1:nLevel,
      [cA{iLevel}, cH{iLevel}, cV{iLevel}, cD{iLevel}] = dwt2(startImage, 'db1');
      startImage = cA{iLevel};
    end
    

    To see what the final decomposed image looks like, along with all the detail coefficient matrices along the way, run the following code (which makes use of wcodemat):

    tiledImage = wcodemat(cA{nLevel}, nColors);
    for iLevel = nLevel:-1:1,
      tiledImage = [tiledImage                    wcodemat(cH{iLevel}, nColors); ...
                    wcodemat(cV{iLevel}, nColors) wcodemat(cD{iLevel}, nColors)];
    end
    figure;
    imshow(tiledImage, map);
    

    You should see something like this:

    enter image description here

    Now it's time to reconstruct! The following code performs a "full" reconstruction (using all of the stored detail coefficient matrices) and a "partial" reconstruction (using none of them), then it plots the images:

    fullRecon = cA{nLevel};
    for iLevel = nLevel:-1:1,
      fullRecon = idwt2(fullRecon, cH{iLevel}, cV{iLevel}, cD{iLevel}, 'db1');
    end
    partialRecon = cA{nLevel};
    for iLevel = nLevel:-1:1,
      partialRecon = idwt2(partialRecon, [], [], [], 'db1');
    end
    figure;
    imshow([X fullRecon; partialRecon zeros(size(X))], map, ...
           'InitialMagnification', 50);
    

    enter image description here

    Notice that the original (top left) and the "full" reconstruction (top right) look indistinguishable, but the "partial" reconstruction (lower left) is very pixelated. The difference wouldn't be as severe if you applied fewer decomposition steps, like just 1 or 2.