7 research outputs found

    Adaptive Quantisation in HEVC for Contouring Artefacts Removal in UHD Content

    Get PDF
    Contouring artefacts affect the visual experience of some particular types of compressed Ultra High Definition (UHD) sequences characterised by smoothly textured areas and gradual transitions in the value of the pixels. This paper proposes a technique to adjust the quantisation process at the encoder so that contouring artefacts are avoided. The devised method does not require any change at the decoder side and introduces a negligible coding rate increment (up to 3.4% for the same objective quality). This result compares favourably with the average 11.2% bit-rate penalty introduced by a method where the quantisation step is reduced in contour-prone areas

    Adaptive Quantization Matrices for HD and UHD Display Resolutions in Scalable HEVC

    Get PDF
    HEVC contains an option to enable custom quantization matrices, which are designed based on the Human Visual System and a 2D Contrast Sensitivity Function. Visual Display Units, capable of displaying video data at High Definition and Ultra HD display resolutions, are frequently utilized on a global scale. Video compression artifacts that are present due to high levels of quantization, which are typically inconspicuous in low display resolution environments, are clearly visible on HD and UHD video data and VDUs. The default QM technique in HEVC does not take into account the video data resolution, nor does it take into consideration the associated display resolution of a VDU to determine the appropriate levels of quantization required to reduce unwanted video compression artifacts. Based on this fact, we propose a novel, adaptive quantization matrix technique for the HEVC standard, including Scalable HEVC. Our technique, which is based on a refinement of the current HVS-CSF QM approach in HEVC, takes into consideration the display resolution of the target VDU for the purpose of minimizing video compression artifacts. In SHVC SHM 9.0, and compared with anchors, the proposed technique yields important quality and coding improvements for the Random Access configuration, with a maximum of 56.5% luma BD-Rate reductions in the enhancement layer. Furthermore, compared with the default QMs and the Sony QMs, our method yields encoding time reductions of 0.75% and 1.19%, respectively.Comment: Data Compression Conference 201

    JNCD-based perceptual compression of RGB 4:4:4 image data

    Get PDF
    In contemporary lossy image coding applications, a desired aim is to decrease, as much as possible, bits per pixel without inducing perceptually conspicuous distortions in RGB image data. In this paper, we propose a novel color-based perceptual compression technique, named RGB-PAQ. RGB-PAQ is based on CIELAB Just Noticeable Color Difference (JNCD) and Human Visual System (HVS) spectral sensitivity. We utilize CIELAB JNCD and HVS spectral sensitivity modeling to separately adjust quantization levels at the Coding Block (CB) level. In essence, our method is designed to capitalize on the inability of the HVS to perceptually differentiate photons in very similar wavelength bands. In terms of application, the proposed technique can be used with RGB (4:4:4) image data of various bit depths and spatial resolutions including, for example, true color and deep color images in HD and Ultra HD resolutions. In the evaluations, we compare RGB-PAQ with a set of anchor methods; namely, HEVC, JPEG, JPEG 2000 and Google WebP. Compared with HEVC HM RExt, RGB-PAQ achieves up to 77.8% bits reductions. The subjective evaluations confirm that the compression artifacts induced by RGB-PAQ proved to be either imperceptible (MOS = 5) or near-imperceptible (MOS = 4) in the vast majority of cases

    Minimizing compression artifacts for high resolutions with adaptive quantization matrices for HEVC

    No full text
    Visual Display Units (VDUs), capable of displaying video data at High Definition (HD) and Ultra HD (UHD) resolutions, are frequently employed in a variety of technological domains. Quantization-induced video compression artifacts, which are usually unnoticeable in low resolution environments, are typically conspicuous on high resolution VDUs and video data. The default quantization matrices (QMs) in HEVC do not take into account specific display resolutions of VDUs or video data to determine the appropriate levels of quantization required to reduce unwanted compression artifacts. Therefore, we propose a novel, adaptive quantization matrix technique for the HEVC standard including Scalable HEVC (SHVC). Our technique, which is based on a refinement of the current QM technique in HEVC, takes into consideration specific display resolutions of the target VDUs in order to minimize compression artifacts. We undertake a thorough evaluation of the proposed technique by utilizing SHVC SHM 9.0 (two-layered bit-stream) and the BD-Rate and SSIM metrics. For the BD-Rate evaluation, the proposed method achieves maximum BD-Rate reductions of 56.5% in the enhancement layer. For the SSIM evaluation, our technique achieves a maximum structural improvement of 0.8660 vs. 0.8538

    High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) tools for next generation video content

    Get PDF
    corecore