Anti-reflective boundary conditions (BCs) have been introduced recently in connection with fast deblurring algorithms. In the noise free case, it has been shown that they substantially reduce artefacts called ringing effects with respect to other classical choices (zero Dirichlet, periodic, reflective BCs) and lead to O(n2log(n)) arithmetic operations, where n2 is the size of the image. In the one-dimensional case, for noisy data, we proposed a successful approach called re-blurring: more specifically, when the PSF is symmetric, the normal equations product ATA is replaced by A2, where A is the blurring operator (see Donatelli et al 2005 Inverse Problems 21 169–82). Our present goal is to extend the re-blurring idea to nonsymmetric point spread functions (PSFs) in two dimensions. In this more general framework, suitable for real applications, the new proposal is to replace AT by A′ in the normal equations, where A′ is the blurring matrix related to the current BCs with PSF rotated by 180°. We notice that, although with zero Dirichlet and periodic BCs the re-blurring approach is equivalent to the normal equations scheme, since there A′ = AT, the novelty concerns both reflective BCs and anti-reflective BCs, where in general A′ ≠ AT. We show that the re-blurring with anti-reflective BCs is computationally convenient and leads to a large reduction of the ringing effects arising in classical deblurring schemes. A wide set of numerical experiments concerning 2D images and nonsymmetric PSFs confirms the effectiveness of our proposal.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.