20 research outputs found

    An energy-aware system-on-chip architecture for intra prediction in HEVC standard

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    High resolution 4K and 8K are becoming the more used in video applications. Those resolutions are well supported in the new HEVC standard. Thus, embedded solutions such as development of dedicated ystems-On-Chips (SOC) to accelerate video processing on one chip instead of only software solutions are commendable. This paper proposes a novel parallel and high efficient hardware accelerator for the intra prediction block. This accelerator achieves a high-speed treatment due to pipelined processing units and parallel shaped architecture. The complexity of memory access is also reduced thanks to the proposed design with less increased power consumption. The implementation was performed on the 7 Series FPGA 28 nm technology resources on Zynq-7000 and results show, that the proposed architecture takes 16520 LUTs and can reach 143.65 MHz as a maximum frequency and it is able to support the throughput of 3840×2160 sequence at 90 frames per second

    Dynamically Reconfigurable Architectures and Systems for Time-varying Image Constraints (DRASTIC) for Image and Video Compression

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    In the current information booming era, image and video consumption is ubiquitous. The associated image and video coding operations require significant computing resources for both small-scale computing systems as well as over larger network systems. For different scenarios, power, bitrate and image quality can impose significant time-varying constraints. For example, mobile devices (e.g., phones, tablets, laptops, UAVs) come with significant constraints on energy and power. Similarly, computer networks provide time-varying bandwidth that can depend on signal strength (e.g., wireless networks) or network traffic conditions. Alternatively, the users can impose different constraints on image quality based on their interests. Traditional image and video coding systems have focused on rate-distortion optimization. More recently, distortion measures (e.g., PSNR) are being replaced by more sophisticated image quality metrics. However, these systems are based on fixed hardware configurations that provide limited options over power consumption. The use of dynamic partial reconfiguration with Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) provides an opportunity to effectively control dynamic power consumption by jointly considering software-hardware configurations. This dissertation extends traditional rate-distortion optimization to rate-quality-power/energy optimization and demonstrates a wide variety of applications in both image and video compression. In each application, a family of Pareto-optimal configurations are developed that allow fine control in the rate-quality-power/energy optimization space. The term Dynamically Reconfiguration Architecture Systems for Time-varying Image Constraints (DRASTIC) is used to describe the derived systems. DRASTIC covers both software-only as well as software-hardware configurations to achieve fine optimization over a set of general modes that include: (i) maximum image quality, (ii) minimum dynamic power/energy, (iii) minimum bitrate, and (iv) typical mode over a set of opposing constraints to guarantee satisfactory performance. In joint software-hardware configurations, DRASTIC provides an effective approach for dynamic power optimization. For software configurations, DRASTIC provides an effective method for energy consumption optimization by controlling processing times. The dissertation provides several applications. First, stochastic methods are given for computing quantization tables that are optimal in the rate-quality space and demonstrated on standard JPEG compression. Second, a DRASTIC implementation of the DCT is used to demonstrate the effectiveness of the approach on motion JPEG. Third, a reconfigurable deblocking filter system is investigated for use in the current H.264/AVC systems. Fourth, the dissertation develops DRASTIC for all 35 intra-prediction modes as well as intra-encoding for the emerging High Efficiency Video Coding standard (HEVC)

    Decoder Hardware Architecture for HEVC

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    This chapter provides an overview of the design challenges faced in the implementation of hardware HEVC decoders. These challenges can be attributed to the larger and diverse coding block sizes and transform sizes, the larger interpolation filter for motion compensation, the increased number of steps in intra prediction and the introduction of a new in-loop filter. Several solutions to address these implementation challenges are discussed. As a reference, results for an HEVC decoder test chip are also presented.Texas Instruments Incorporate

    A 249-Mpixel/s HEVC Video-Decoder Chip for 4K Ultra-HD Applications

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    High Efficiency Video Coding, the latest video standard, uses larger and variable-sized coding units and longer interpolation filters than [H.264 over AVC] to better exploit redundancy in video signals. These algorithmic techniques enable a 50% decrease in bitrate at the cost of computational complexity, external memory bandwidth, and, for ASIC implementations, on-chip SRAM of the video codec. This paper describes architectural optimizations for an HEVC video decoder chip. The chip uses a two-stage subpipelining scheme to reduce on-chip SRAM by 56 kbytes-a 32% reduction. A high-throughput read-only cache combined with DRAM-latency-aware memory mapping reduces DRAM bandwidth by 67%. The chip is built for HEVC Working Draft 4 Low Complexity configuration and occupies 1.77 mm[superscript 2] in 40-nm CMOS. It performs 4K Ultra HD 30-fps video decoding at 200 MHz while consuming 1.19 [nJ over pixel] of normalized system power.Texas Instruments Incorporate

    Circuit implementations for high-efficiency video coding tools

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    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2012.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 71-72).High-Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) is planned to be the successor video standard to the popular Advanced Video Coding (H.264/AVC) with a targeted 2x improvement in compression at the same quality. This improvement comes at the cost of increased complexity through the addition of new coding tools and increased computation in existing tools. The ever-increasing demand for higher resolution video further adds to the computation cost. In this work, digital circuits for two HEVC tools - inverse transform and deblocking filter are implemented to support Quad-Full HD (4K x 2K) video decoding at 30fps. Techniques to reduce power and area cost are investigated and synthesis results in 40nm CMOS technology and Virtex-6 FPGA platform are presented.by Mehul Tikekar.S.M

    Low energy video processing and compression hardware designs

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    Digital video processing and compression algorithms are used in many commercial products such as mobile devices, unmanned aerial vehicles, and autonomous cars. Increasing resolution of videos used in these commercial products increased computational complexities of digital video processing and compression algorithms. Therefore, it is necessary to reduce computational complexities of digital video processing and compression algorithms, and energy consumptions of digital video processing and compression hardware without reducing visual quality. In this thesis, we propose a novel adaptive 2D digital image processing algorithm for 2D median filter, Gaussian blur and image sharpening. We designed low energy 2D median filter, Gaussian blur and image sharpening hardware using the proposed algorithm. We propose approximate HEVC intra prediction and HEVC fractional interpolation algorithms. We designed low energy approximate HEVC intra prediction and HEVC fractional interpolation hardware. We also propose several HEVC fractional interpolation hardware architectures. We propose novel computational complexity and energy reduction techniques for HEVC DCT and inverse DCT/DST. We designed high performance and low energy hardware for HEVC DCT and inverse DCT/DST including the proposed techniques. VII We quantified computation reductions achieved and video quality loss caused by the proposed algorithms and techniques. We implemented the proposed hardware architectures in Verilog HDL. We mapped the Verilog RTL codes to Xilinx Virtex 6 and Xilinx ZYNQ FPGAs, and estimated their power consumptions using Xilinx XPower Analyzer tool. The proposed algorithms and techniques significantly reduced the power and energy consumptions of these FPGA implementations in some cases with no PSNR loss and in some cases with very small PSNR loss

    High performance HEVC and FVC video compression hardware designs

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    High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) is the current state-of-the-art video compression standard developed by Joint collaborative team on video coding (JCT-VC). HEVC has 50% better compression efficiency than H.264 which is the previous video compression standard. HEVC achieves this video compression efficiency by significantly increasing the computational complexity. Therefore, in this thesis, we proposed a low complexity HEVC sub-pixel motion estimation (SPME) technique for SPME in HEVC encoder. We designed and implemented a high performance HEVC SPME hardware implementing the proposed technique. We also designed and implemented an HEVC fractional interpolation hardware using memory based constant multiplication technique for both HEVC encoder and decoder. Future Video Coding (FVC) is a new international video compression standard which is currently being developed by JCT-VC. FVC offers much better compression efficiency than the state-of-the-art HEVC video compression standard at the expense of much higher computational complexity. In this thesis, we designed and implemented three different high performance FVC 2D transform hardware. The proposed hardware is verified to work correctly on an FPGA board
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