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Dimitri Galayko

Dimitri Galayko contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

CASISR: Circular Arbitrary-Scale Image Super-Resolution

The generalization performance (GP) of deep learning-based arbitrary-scale image super-resolution (ASISR) methods is subject to limited training datasets and unlimited testing datasets. It is vitally significant to enhance the GP of the pretrained ASISR models by making full use of the testing samples. The ASISR models usually employ an open-loop architecture from low-resolution (LR) images to super-resolution (SR) images. The degradation model from SR samples to LR samples is known bicubic down-sampling for the classical ASISR, is supposed down-sampling with additive random noise for the blind ASISR, and is learnable for the real-world ASISR. Combining the ASISR and degradation models, it is potentially possible to adopt a closed-loop architecture based on the automatic control theory for strengthening the GP of the ASISR methods. Therefore, this paper proposes a closed-loop architecture, circular ASISR (CASISR), to lift the capability of image reconstruction. A mathematical nonlinear loop equation is established to describe the CASISR, the reasonability of the CASISR is proven by conditional probability theory, and the stability of the CASISR is proven by Taylor series approximation. The first-order and second-order absolute difference images are defined to compare the image reconstruction performance of the ASISR and the CASISR methods. Comprehensive simulation experiments show that the proposed CASISR approach outperforms the eight state-of-the-art ASISR approaches in the quality of image reconstruction. Especially, the proposed CASISR is extraordinarily suitable for fractional SR scale factors and is extremely effective for text and stripe images with drastically changed edges.

preprint2026arXiv

CIC: Circular Image Compression

Learned image compression (LIC) is currently the cutting-edge method. However, the inherent difference between testing and training images of LIC results in performance degradation to some extent. Especially for out-of-sample, out-of-distribution, or out-of-domain testing images, the performance of LIC degrades significantly. Classical LIC is a serial image compression (SIC) approach that utilizes an open-loop architecture with serial encoding and decoding units. Nevertheless, according to the principles of automatic control systems, a closed-loop architecture holds the potential to improve the dynamic and static performance of LIC. Therefore, a circular image compression (CIC) approach with closed-loop encoding and decoding elements is proposed to minimize the gap between testing and training images and upgrade the capability of LIC. The proposed CIC establishes a nonlinear loop equation and proves that steady-state error between reconstructed and original images is close to zero by Taylor series expansion. The proposed CIC method possesses the property of Post-Training and Plug-and-Play which can be built on any existing advanced SIC methods. Experimental results including rate-distortion curves on five public image compression datasets demonstrate that the proposed CIC outperforms eight competing state-of-the-art open-source SIC algorithms in reconstruction capacity. Experimental results further show that the proposed method is suitable for out-of-sample testing images with dark backgrounds, sharp edges, high contrast, grid shapes, or complex patterns.

preprint2022arXiv

Cascade Decoders-Based Autoencoders for Image Reconstruction

Autoencoders are composed of coding and decoding units, hence they hold the inherent potential of high-performance data compression and signal compressed sensing. The main disadvantages of current autoencoders comprise the following several aspects: the research objective is not data reconstruction but feature representation; the performance evaluation of data recovery is neglected; it is hard to achieve lossless data reconstruction by pure autoencoders, even by pure deep learning. This paper aims for image reconstruction of autoencoders, employs cascade decoders-based autoencoders, perfects the performance of image reconstruction, approaches gradually lossless image recovery, and provides solid theory and application basis for autoencoders-based image compression and compressed sensing. The proposed serial decoders-based autoencoders include the architectures of multi-level decoders and the related optimization algorithms. The cascade decoders consist of general decoders, residual decoders, adversarial decoders and their combinations. It is evaluated by the experimental results that the proposed autoencoders outperform the classical autoencoders in the performance of image reconstruction.

preprint2022arXiv

ICRICS: Iterative Compensation Recovery for Image Compressive Sensing

Closed-loop architecture is widely utilized in automatic control systems and attain distinguished performance. However, classical compressive sensing systems employ open-loop architecture with separated sampling and reconstruction units. Therefore, a method of iterative compensation recovery for image compressive sensing (ICRICS) is proposed by introducing closed-loop framework into traditional compresses sensing systems. The proposed method depends on any existing approaches and upgrades their reconstruction performance by adding negative feedback structure. Theory analysis on negative feedback of compressive sensing systems is performed. An approximate mathematical proof of the effectiveness of the proposed method is also provided. Simulation experiments on more than 3 image datasets show that the proposed method is superior to 10 competition approaches in reconstruction performance. The maximum increment of average peak signal-to-noise ratio is 4.36 dB and the maximum increment of average structural similarity is 0.034 on one dataset. The proposed method based on negative feedback mechanism can efficiently correct the recovery error in the existing systems of image compressive sensing.

preprint2019arXiv

Electrostatic Near-Limits Kinetic Energy Harvesting from Arbitrary Input Vibrations

The full architecture of an electrostatic kinetic energy harvester (KEH) based on the concept of near-limits KEH is reported. This concept refers to the conversion of kinetic energy to electric energy, from environmental vibrations of arbitrary forms, and at rates that target the physical limits set by the device's size and the input excitation characteristics. This is achieved thanks to the synthesis of particular KEH's mass dynamics, that maximize the harvested energy. Synthesizing these dynamics requires little hypotheses on the exact form of the input vibrations. In the proposed architecture, these dynamics are implemented by an adequate mechanical control which is synthesized by the electrostatic transducer. An interface circuit is proposed to carry out the necessary energy transfers between the transducer and the system's energy tank. A computation and finite-state automaton unit controls the interface circuit, based on the external input and on the system's mechanical state. The operation of the reported near-limits KEH is illustrated in simulations that demonstrate proof of concept of the proposed architecture. A figure of $68\%$ of the absolute limit of the KEH's input energy for the considered excitation is attained. This can be further improved by complete system optimization that takes into account the application constraints, the control law, the mechanical design of the transducer, the electrical interface design, and the sensing and computation blocks.