Abstract
Light fields become a popular representation of threedimensional scenes, and there is interest in their processing,
resampling, and compression. As those operations often
result in loss of quality, there is a need to quantify it. In
this work, we collect a new dataset of dense reference and
distorted light fields as well as the corresponding quality
scores which are scaled in perceptual units. The scores
were acquired in a subjective experiment using an interactive light-field viewing setup. The dataset contains typical
artifacts that occur in light-field processing chain due to
light-field reconstruction, multi-view compression, and limitations of automultiscopic displays. We test a number of
existing objective quality metrics to determine how well they
can predict the quality of light fields. We find that the existing
image quality metrics provide good measures of light-field
quality, but require dense reference light- fields for optimal
performance. For more complex tasks of comparing two
distorted light fields, their performance drops significantly,
which reveals the need for new, light-field-specific metrics.