4.7 Article

Visual Quality Assessment for Perceptually Encrypted Light Field Images

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TCSVT.2020.3026817

Keywords

Visualization; Encryption; Image databases; Measurement; Visual quality assessment; perceptual encryption; light field image; epipolar plane image

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018AAA0100601]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of China [61961022, 61822109, 62072237]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangxi Province [20202BAB202022]
  4. Chongqing Key Laboratory of Mobile Communications Technology [cqupt-mct-201901]

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This paper discusses the application of perceptual encryption in protecting multimedia visual information, focusing on the characteristics of light field images and a novel method for visual security evaluation.
Perceptual encryption has received widespread attention as a technology for protecting multimedia visual information. In multimedia applications, perceptual encryption only protects a portion of the content without previewing all the information. At present, perceptual encryption is mostly oriented to conventional plain images while few methods aim at visual security measures for perceptually encrypted images. Existing solutions usually adopt well-known quality assessment metrics to measure the visual quality of encrypted images. However, they often exhibit undesired behavior on perceptually encrypted images with low quality. As a typical representation of three-dimensional scenes, light field images record the intensity and direction of light during propagation which is distinct from 2-D images. In this paper, we construct a perceptually encrypted light field image database (PE-LFID) for quality assessment based on 14 reference light field plaintext images. For each scene, we employ four encryption methods, each of which has six levels. Additionally, a novel visual security evaluation method based on PE-LFID is proposed by taking into account the local and global features of the light field images. First, we use a multi-threshold edge detection method to obtain the edge similarity in the spatial domain of the light field image. Afterwards, the epipolar plane image (EPI) generated from the angular domain of the light field image is used to calculate the gradient magnitude similarity, which is expressed as a global feature. Furthermore, the final quality prediction score is calculated by adaptively weighting between local and global features. We conduct extensive experiments on the proposed PE-LFID to assess the performance of classical and state-of-the-art IQA models. The experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method for visual security evaluation of perceptually encrypted light field images, as well as the scalability of PE-LFID.

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