我要吃瓜

Article

Visual Attention-Based Image Watermarking

Details

Citation

Bhowmik D, Oakes M & Abhayaratne C (2016) Visual Attention-Based Image Watermarking. IEEE Access, 4, pp. 8002-8018. https://doi.org/10.1109/access.2016.2627241

Abstract
Imperceptibility and robustness are two complementary but fundamental requirements of any watermarking algorithm. Low strength watermarking yields high imperceptibility but exhibits poor robustness. High strength watermarking schemes achieve good robustness but often infuse distortions resulting in poor visual quality in host media. If distortion due to high strength watermarking can avoid visually attentive regions, such distortions are unlikely to be noticeable to any viewer. In this paper, we exploit this concept and propose a novel visual attention-based highly robust image watermarking methodology by embedding lower and higher strength watermarks in visually salient and non-salient regions, respectively. A new low complexity wavelet domain visual attention model is proposed that allows us to design new robust watermarking algorithms. The proposed new saliency model outperforms the state-of-the-art method in joint saliency detection and low computational complexity performances. In evaluating watermarking performances, the proposed blind and non-blind algorithms exhibit increased robustness to various natural image processing and filtering attacks with minimal or no effect on image quality, as verified by both subjective and objective visual quality evaluation. Up to 25% and 40% improvement against JPEG2000 compression and common filtering attacks, respectively, are reported against the existing algorithms that do not use a visual attention model.

Keywords
Visual saliency; wavelet; watermarking; robustness; subjective test

Journal
IEEE Access: Volume 4

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/12/2016
Publication date online09/11/2016
Date accepted by journal20/10/2016
URL
PublisherInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
eISSN2169-3536

Files (1)

Research centres/groups