Paper

Spectral-wise Implicit Neural Representation for Hyperspectral Image Reconstruction

Coded Aperture Snapshot Spectral Imaging (CASSI) reconstruction aims to recover the 3D spatial-spectral signal from 2D measurement. Existing methods for reconstructing Hyperspectral Image (HSI) typically involve learning mappings from a 2D compressed image to a predetermined set of discrete spectral bands. However, this approach overlooks the inherent continuity of the spectral information. In this study, we propose an innovative method called Spectral-wise Implicit Neural Representation (SINR) as a pioneering step toward addressing this limitation. SINR introduces a continuous spectral amplification process for HSI reconstruction, enabling spectral super-resolution with customizable magnification factors. To achieve this, we leverage the concept of implicit neural representation. Specifically, our approach introduces a spectral-wise attention mechanism that treats individual channels as distinct tokens, thereby capturing global spectral dependencies. Additionally, our approach incorporates two components, namely a Fourier coordinate encoder and a spectral scale factor module. The Fourier coordinate encoder enhances the SINR's ability to emphasize high-frequency components, while the spectral scale factor module guides the SINR to adapt to the variable number of spectral channels. Notably, the SINR framework enhances the flexibility of CASSI reconstruction by accommodating an unlimited number of spectral bands in the desired output. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our SINR outperforms baseline methods. By enabling continuous reconstruction within the CASSI framework, we take the initial stride toward integrating implicit neural representation into the field.

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