Conventional Image Signal Processors (ISPs) employ manually crafted designs with limited adaptability, resulting in suboptimal performance in dynamic environments for both visual quality and machine vision applications. While deep learning facilitates adaptive AI-ISPs, supervised approaches encounter domain shift limitations and substantial computational demands that impede edge deployment. This work introduces an adaptive zero-shot AI-ISP that dynamically optimizes processing pipelines without requiring paired training data. The proposed architecture implements dual specialized subnetworks for illumination estimation and denoising enhancement, operating collaboratively under Retinex theory principles to achieve boundary-aware illumination mapping and noise-resilient image restoration. Additionally, a physically constrained loss function is introduced to enhance color fidelity and noise suppression. For practical implementation, an FPGA-accelerated computing engine replaces transposed convolution with optimized bilinear interpolation, effectively eliminating artifacting while achieving superior memory efficiency through customized buffering architectures. A comprehensive evaluation demonstrates highly competitive performance, achieving a PSNR of 19.91/16.62 and an SSIM of 0.591/0.475 on LSRW-Huawei/Nikon datasets, alongside NIQE scores of 2.065/3.025 on DCIM and TM-DIED datasets. The hardware implementation attains 42.5 GOPS/W power efficiency, representing 35.4× and 7.3× improvements over conventional CPU and GPU platforms, establishing a comprehensive edge deployment solution for next-generation intelligent image processing systems.
He et al. (Wed,) studied this question.