Spatio-Spectral Pattern Illumination for Direct and Indirect Separation from a Single Hyperspectral Image

Shin Ishihara, Imari Sato; Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV), 2025, pp. 26827-26836

Abstract


Hyperspectral imaging has proven effective for appearance inspection because it can identify material compositions and reveal hidden features. Similarly, direct/indirect separation provides essential information about surface appearance and internal conditions, including layer structures and scattering behaviors. This paper presents a novel illumination system incorporating dispersive optics to unify both advantages for scene analysis. In general, achieving distinct direct/indirect separation requires multiple images with varying patterns. In a hyperspectral scenario, using a hyperspectral camera or tunable filters extends exposure and measurement times, hindering practical application. Our proposed system enables the illumination of a wavelength-dependent, spatially shifted pattern. With proper consideration of reflectance differences, we demonstrate that robust separation of direct and indirect components for each wavelength can be achieved using a single hyperspectral image acquired under our single spatio-spectral pattern illumination.

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[bibtex]
@InProceedings{Ishihara_2025_ICCV, author = {Ishihara, Shin and Sato, Imari}, title = {Spatio-Spectral Pattern Illumination for Direct and Indirect Separation from a Single Hyperspectral Image}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV)}, month = {October}, year = {2025}, pages = {26827-26836} }