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Monday, July 14, 2014

Follow up on "Imaging With Nature: Compressive Imaging Using a Multiply Scattering Medium"



Following up on Imaging With Nature: Compressive Imaging Using a Multiply Scattering Medium (but also [2,3] ) and after I probably spammed him, Jared Tanner sent me the following:
Dear Igor, 
Thank you for alerting me to your work. I’m so glad that you have turned your vast expertise from the blog into research results. And in particular congratulations on its being published in nature. In reading it I noticed that you are using an MMV framework from three illuminations. Though MMV isn’t a topic I am an expert on, I have stumbled upon an interesting feature that the CGIHT algorithm benefits more from MMV than do other competing algorithms, see Figure 5 of 
http://people.maths.ox.ac.uk/tanner/papers/BlTaWe_cgiht.pdf 
Note that we haven’t compared with OMP so don’t know how well it might be performing.
All the best,
Jared
-------
Jared Tanner
Professor of the Mathematics of Information
Mathematics Institute
University of Oxford
http://people.maths.ox.ac.uk/tanner


To which I replied:

Also, with regards to MMV, Jeff [Blanchard] had alerted me to some of these results back in January and I even blogged about it. 
http://nuit-blanche.blogspot.fr/2014/01/sharp-phase-transition-for-joint-sparse.html 
I have to say that I should probably have pushed for y'all preprint to be used as a reference but the paper had been written several times already and I was getting fed up with the different submission processes (I will tell that story eventually).
Please note that MMV has provided interesting results in a similar field: http://nuit-blanche.blogspot.fr/2013/10/imaging-strong-localized-scatterers.html



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