Researcher profile

Mikhail G. Mozerov

Mikhail G. Mozerov contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

The Direct Integration Theorem: A Rigorous Framework for Consistent Discrete Solutions of the Inverse Radon Problem

This paper presents a novel Direct Integration Theorem (DIT), derived as a non-trivial corollary of the classical Central Slice Theorem (CST). The DIT provides a mathematically consistent transition from the continuous to the discrete domain - a fundamental challenge in computed tomography - thereby eliminating the need for frequency-domain interpolation without resorting to conventional ramp-filtering. The proposed approach circumvents two principal limitations inherent in traditional methods: (i) the zero-frequency singularity and spectral distortions introduced by the mandatory ramp-filtering step, and (ii) discretization inaccuracies associated with frequency-domain interpolation. Based on the DIT, we develop a rigorous framework for consistent discrete solutions of the inverse Radon problem. Mathematical modeling demonstrates that this approach achieves quasi-exact reconstruction, with errors constrained solely by sampling parameters and grid geometry. Furthermore, while Filtered Back Projection (FBP) inherently distorts the variance of the reconstructed image, the DIT-based algorithm preserves it. Comparative simulations confirm that the proposed method eliminates common artifacts, such as intensity cupping, and consistently outperforms FBP in terms of PSNR, SSIM, and reprojection fidelity, faithfully restoring the original image's statistical characteristics.

preprint2022arXiv

Slimmable Compressive Autoencoders for Practical Neural Image Compression

Neural image compression leverages deep neural networks to outperform traditional image codecs in rate-distortion performance. However, the resulting models are also heavy, computationally demanding and generally optimized for a single rate, limiting their practical use. Focusing on practical image compression, we propose slimmable compressive autoencoders (SlimCAEs), where rate (R) and distortion (D) are jointly optimized for different capacities. Once trained, encoders and decoders can be executed at different capacities, leading to different rates and complexities. We show that a successful implementation of SlimCAEs requires suitable capacity-specific RD tradeoffs. Our experiments show that SlimCAEs are highly flexible models that provide excellent rate-distortion performance, variable rate, and dynamic adjustment of memory, computational cost and latency, thus addressing the main requirements of practical image compression.