PM2.5 is an important indicator of the severity of air pollution and its level can be predicted through hazy photographs caused by its degradation. Image-based PM2.5 estimation is thus extensively employed in various multimedia applications but is challenging because of its ill-posed property. In this paper, we convert it to the problem of estimating the PM2.5-relevant haze transmission and propose a learning model called the transmission filtering network. Different from most methods that generate a transmission map directly from a hazy image, our model takes the coarse transmission map derived from the dark channel prior as the input. To obtain a transmission map that satisfies the local smoothness constraint without regional boundary degradation, our model performs the edge-preserving smoothing filtering as the refinement on the map. Moreover, we introduce the attention mechanism to the network architecture for more efficient feature extraction and smoothing effects in the transmission estimation. Experimental results prove that our model performs favorably against the state-of-the-art dehazing methods in a variety of hazy scenes.
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