1. Introduction
Standard digital photography sensors are unable to capture the wide range of illumination present in natural scenes, resulting in Low Dynamic Range (LDR) images that often suffer from over or underexposed regions, which can damage the details of the scene. High Dynamic Range (HDR) imaging has been developed to address these limitations. This technique combines several LDR images with different exposures to generate an HDR image. While HDR imaging can effectively recover details in static scenes, it may produce ghosting artifacts when used with dynamic scenes or hand-held camera scenarios.
The proposed method generates high-quality images with few labeled samples when compared with several methods.