420 research outputs found
Shape representation and coding of visual objets in multimedia applications — An overview
Emerging multimedia applications have created the need for new functionalities in digital communications. Whereas existing compression standards only deal with the audio-visual scene at a frame level, it is now necessary to handle individual objects separately, thus allowing scalable transmission as well as interactive scene recomposition by the receiver. The future MPEG-4 standard aims at providing compression tools addressing these functionalities. Unlike existing frame-based standards, the corresponding coding schemes need to encode shape information explicitly. This paper reviews existing solutions to the problem of shape representation and coding. Region and contour coding techniques are presented and their performance is discussed, considering coding efficiency and rate-distortion control capability, as well as flexibility to application requirements such as progressive transmission, low-delay coding, and error robustnes
Low-latency compression of mocap data using learned spatial decorrelation transform
Due to the growing needs of human motion capture (mocap) in movie, video
games, sports, etc., it is highly desired to compress mocap data for efficient
storage and transmission. This paper presents two efficient frameworks for
compressing human mocap data with low latency. The first framework processes
the data in a frame-by-frame manner so that it is ideal for mocap data
streaming and time critical applications. The second one is clip-based and
provides a flexible tradeoff between latency and compression performance. Since
mocap data exhibits some unique spatial characteristics, we propose a very
effective transform, namely learned orthogonal transform (LOT), for reducing
the spatial redundancy. The LOT problem is formulated as minimizing square
error regularized by orthogonality and sparsity and solved via alternating
iteration. We also adopt a predictive coding and temporal DCT for temporal
decorrelation in the frame- and clip-based frameworks, respectively.
Experimental results show that the proposed frameworks can produce higher
compression performance at lower computational cost and latency than the
state-of-the-art methods.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Time-varying volume visualization
Volume rendering is a very active research field in Computer Graphics because of its wide range of applications in various sciences, from medicine to flow mechanics. In this report, we survey a state-of-the-art on time-varying volume rendering. We state several basic concepts and then we establish several criteria to classify the studied works: IVR versus DVR, 4D versus 3D+time, compression techniques, involved architectures, use of parallelism and image-space versus object-space coherence. We also address other related problems as transfer functions and 2D cross-sections computation of time-varying volume data. All the papers reviewed are classified into several tables based on the mentioned classification and, finally, several conclusions are presented.Preprin
Geometric Prior Based Deep Human Point Cloud Geometry Compression
The emergence of digital avatars has raised an exponential increase in the
demand for human point clouds with realistic and intricate details. The
compression of such data becomes challenging with overwhelming data amounts
comprising millions of points. Herein, we leverage the human geometric prior in
geometry redundancy removal of point clouds, greatly promoting the compression
performance. More specifically, the prior provides topological constraints as
geometry initialization, allowing adaptive adjustments with a compact parameter
set that could be represented with only a few bits. Therefore, we can envisage
high-resolution human point clouds as a combination of geometric priors and
structural deviations. The priors could first be derived with an aligned point
cloud, and subsequently the difference of features is compressed into a compact
latent code. The proposed framework can operate in a play-and-plug fashion with
existing learning based point cloud compression methods. Extensive experimental
results show that our approach significantly improves the compression
performance without deteriorating the quality, demonstrating its promise in a
variety of applications
- …