63 research outputs found

    Quantization Watermarking for Joint Compression and Data Hiding Schemes

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    International audienceEnrichment and protection of JPEG2000 images is an important issue. Data hiding techniques are a good solution to solve these problems. In this context, we can consider the joint approach to introduce data hiding technique into JPEG2000 coding pipeline. Data hiding consists of imperceptibly altering multimedia content, to convey some information. This process is done in such a way that the hidden data is not perceptible to an observer. Digital watermarking is one type of data hiding. In addition to the imperceptibility and payload constraints, the watermark should be robust against a variety of manipulations or attacks. We focus on trellis coded quantization (TCQ) data hiding techniques and propose two JPEG2000 compression and data hiding schemes. The properties of TCQ quantization, defined in JPEG2000 part 2, are used to perform quantization and information embedding during the same time. The first scheme is designed for content description and management applications with the objective of achieving high payloads. The compression rate/imperceptibility/payload trade off is our main concern. The second joint scheme has been developed for robust watermarking and can have consequently many applications. We achieve the better imperceptibility/robustness trade off in the context of JPEG2000 compression. We provide some experimental results on the implementation of these two schemes

    A human visual system based image coder

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    Over the years, society has changed considerably due to technological changes, and digital images have become part and parcel of our everyday lives. Irrespective of applications (i.e., digital camera) and services (information sharing, e.g., Youtube, archive / storage), there is the need for high image quality with high compression ratios. Hence, considerable efforts have been invested in the area of image compression. The traditional image compression systems take into account of statistical redundancies inherent in the image data. However, the development and adaptation of vision models, which take into account the properties of the human visual system (HVS), into picture coders have since shown promising results. The objective of the thesis is to propose the implementation of a vision model in two different manners in the JPEG2000 coding system: (a) a Perceptual Colour Distortion Measure (PCDM) for colour images in the encoding stage, and (b) a Perceptual Post Filtering (PPF) algorithm for colour images in the decoding stage. Both implementations are embedded into the JPEG2000 coder. The vision model here exploits the contrast sensitivity, the inter-orientation masking and intra-band masking visual properties of the HVS. Extensive calibration work has been undertaken to fine-tune the 42 model parameters of the PCDM and Just-Noticeable-Difference thresholds of the PPF for colour images. Evaluation with subjective assessments of PCDM based coder has shown perceived quality improvement over the JPEG2000 benchmark with the MSE (mean square error) and CVIS criteria. For the PPF adapted JPEG2000 decoder, performance evaluation has also shown promising results against the JPEG2000 benchmarks. Based on subjective evaluation, when both PCDM and PPF are used in the JPEG2000 coding system, the overall perceived image quality is superior to the stand-alone JPEG2000 with the PCDM

    Significance linked connected component analysis plus

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    Dr. Xinhua Zhuang, Dissertation Supervisor.Field of Study: Computer Science."May 2018."An image coding algorithm, SLCCA Plus, is introduced in this dissertation. SLCCA Plus is a wavelet-based subband coding method. In wavelet-based subband coding, the input images will go through a wavelet transform and be decomposed into wavelet subband pyramids. Then the characteristics of the wavelet coefficients within and among subbands will be utilized to removing the redundancy. The rest information will be organized and go through entropy encoding. SLCCA Plus contains a series improvement method to the SLCCA. Before SLCCA, there are three top-ranked wavelet image coders. Namely, Embedded Zerotree Wavelet coder (EZW), Morphological Representation of Wavelet Date (MEWD), and Set Partitioning in Hierarchical Trees (SPIHT). They exploit either inter-subband relation among zero wavelet coefficients or within-subband clustering. SLCCA, on the other hand, outperforms these three coders by exploring both the inter- subband coefficients relations and within-subband clustering of significant wavelet coefficients. SLCCA Plus strengthens SLCCA in the following aspects: Intelligence quantization, enhanced cluster filter, potential-significant shared-zero, and improved context models. The purpose of the first three improvements is to remove redundancy information further while keeping the image error as low as possible. As a result, they achieve a better trade-off between bit cost and image quality. Moreover, the improved context lowers the entropy by refining the classification of symbols in cluster sequence and magnitude bit-planes. Lower entropy means the adaptive arithmetic coding can achieve a better coding gain. For performance evaluation, SLCCA Plus is compared to SLCCA and JPEG2000. On average, SLCCA Plus achieves 7% bit saving over JPEG 2000 and 4% over SLCCA. The results comparison shows that SLCCA Plus shows more texture and edge details at a lower bitrate.Includes bibliographical references (pages 88-92)

    Efficient architectures for multidimensional discrete transforms in image and video processing applications

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    PhD ThesisThis thesis introduces new image compression algorithms, their related architectures and data transforms architectures. The proposed architectures consider the current hardware architectures concerns, such as power consumption, hardware usage, memory requirement, computation time and output accuracy. These concerns and problems are crucial in multidimensional image and video processing applications. This research is divided into three image and video processing related topics: low complexity non-transform-based image compression algorithms and their architectures, architectures for multidimensional Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT); and architectures for multidimensional Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT). The proposed architectures are parameterised in terms of wordlength, pipelining and input data size. Taking such parameterisation into account, efficient non-transform based and low complexity image compression algorithms for better rate distortion performance are proposed. The proposed algorithms are based on the Adaptive Quantisation Coding (AQC) algorithm, and they achieve a controllable output bit rate and accuracy by considering the intensity variation of each image block. Their high speed, low hardware usage and low power consumption architectures are also introduced and implemented on Xilinx devices. Furthermore, efficient hardware architectures for multidimensional DCT based on the 1-D DCT Radix-2 and 3-D DCT Vector Radix (3-D DCT VR) fast algorithms have been proposed. These architectures attain fast and accurate 3-D DCT computation and provide high processing speed and power consumption reduction. In addition, this research also introduces two low hardware usage 3-D DCT VR architectures. Such architectures perform the computation of butterfly and post addition stages without using block memory for data transposition, which in turn reduces the hardware usage and improves the performance of the proposed architectures. Moreover, parallel and multiplierless lifting-based architectures for the 1-D, 2-D and 3-D Cohen-Daubechies-Feauveau 9/7 (CDF 9/7) DWT computation are also introduced. The presented architectures represent an efficient multiplierless and low memory requirement CDF 9/7 DWT computation scheme using the separable approach. Furthermore, the proposed architectures have been implemented and tested using Xilinx FPGA devices. The evaluation results have revealed that a speed of up to 315 MHz can be achieved in the proposed AQC-based architectures. Further, a speed of up to 330 MHz and low utilisation rate of 722 to 1235 can be achieved in the proposed 3-D DCT VR architectures. In addition, in the proposed 3-D DWT architecture, the computation time of 3-D DWT for data size of 144×176×8-pixel is less than 0.33 ms. Also, a power consumption of 102 mW at 50 MHz clock frequency using 256×256-pixel frame size is achieved. The accuracy tests for all architectures have revealed that a PSNR of infinite can be attained

    深層学習に基づく画像圧縮と品質評価

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    早大学位記番号:新8427早稲田大

    Design of a secure architecture for the exchange of biomedical information in m-Health scenarios

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    El paradigma de m-Salud (salud móvil) aboga por la integración masiva de las más avanzadas tecnologías de comunicación, red móvil y sensores en aplicaciones y sistemas de salud, para fomentar el despliegue de un nuevo modelo de atención clínica centrada en el usuario/paciente. Este modelo tiene por objetivos el empoderamiento de los usuarios en la gestión de su propia salud (p.ej. aumentando sus conocimientos, promocionando estilos de vida saludable y previniendo enfermedades), la prestación de una mejor tele-asistencia sanitaria en el hogar para ancianos y pacientes crónicos y una notable disminución del gasto de los Sistemas de Salud gracias a la reducción del número y la duración de las hospitalizaciones. No obstante, estas ventajas, atribuidas a las aplicaciones de m-Salud, suelen venir acompañadas del requisito de un alto grado de disponibilidad de la información biomédica de sus usuarios para garantizar una alta calidad de servicio, p.ej. fusionar varias señales de un usuario para obtener un diagnóstico más preciso. La consecuencia negativa de cumplir esta demanda es el aumento directo de las superficies potencialmente vulnerables a ataques, lo que sitúa a la seguridad (y a la privacidad) del modelo de m-Salud como factor crítico para su éxito. Como requisito no funcional de las aplicaciones de m-Salud, la seguridad ha recibido menos atención que otros requisitos técnicos que eran más urgentes en etapas de desarrollo previas, tales como la robustez, la eficiencia, la interoperabilidad o la usabilidad. Otro factor importante que ha contribuido a retrasar la implementación de políticas de seguridad sólidas es que garantizar un determinado nivel de seguridad implica unos costes que pueden ser muy relevantes en varias dimensiones, en especial en la económica (p.ej. sobrecostes por la inclusión de hardware extra para la autenticación de usuarios), en el rendimiento (p.ej. reducción de la eficiencia y de la interoperabilidad debido a la integración de elementos de seguridad) y en la usabilidad (p.ej. configuración más complicada de dispositivos y aplicaciones de salud debido a las nuevas opciones de seguridad). Por tanto, las soluciones de seguridad que persigan satisfacer a todos los actores del contexto de m-Salud (usuarios, pacientes, personal médico, personal técnico, legisladores, fabricantes de dispositivos y equipos, etc.) deben ser robustas y al mismo tiempo minimizar sus costes asociados. Esta Tesis detalla una propuesta de seguridad, compuesta por cuatro grandes bloques interconectados, para dotar de seguridad a las arquitecturas de m-Salud con unos costes reducidos. El primer bloque define un esquema global que proporciona unos niveles de seguridad e interoperabilidad acordes con las características de las distintas aplicaciones de m-Salud. Este esquema está compuesto por tres capas diferenciadas, diseñadas a la medidas de los dominios de m-Salud y de sus restricciones, incluyendo medidas de seguridad adecuadas para la defensa contra las amenazas asociadas a sus aplicaciones de m-Salud. El segundo bloque establece la extensión de seguridad de aquellos protocolos estándar que permiten la adquisición, el intercambio y/o la administración de información biomédica -- por tanto, usados por muchas aplicaciones de m-Salud -- pero no reúnen los niveles de seguridad detallados en el esquema previo. Estas extensiones se concretan para los estándares biomédicos ISO/IEEE 11073 PHD y SCP-ECG. El tercer bloque propone nuevas formas de fortalecer la seguridad de los tests biomédicos, que constituyen el elemento esencial de muchas aplicaciones de m-Salud de carácter clínico, mediante codificaciones novedosas. Finalmente el cuarto bloque, que se sitúa en paralelo a los anteriores, selecciona herramientas genéricas de seguridad (elementos de autenticación y criptográficos) cuya integración en los otros bloques resulta idónea, y desarrolla nuevas herramientas de seguridad, basadas en señal -- embedding y keytagging --, para reforzar la protección de los test biomédicos.The paradigm of m-Health (mobile health) advocates for the massive integration of advanced mobile communications, network and sensor technologies in healthcare applications and systems to foster the deployment of a new, user/patient-centered healthcare model enabling the empowerment of users in the management of their health (e.g. by increasing their health literacy, promoting healthy lifestyles and the prevention of diseases), a better home-based healthcare delivery for elderly and chronic patients and important savings for healthcare systems due to the reduction of hospitalizations in number and duration. It is a fact that many m-Health applications demand high availability of biomedical information from their users (for further accurate analysis, e.g. by fusion of various signals) to guarantee high quality of service, which on the other hand entails increasing the potential surfaces for attacks. Therefore, it is not surprising that security (and privacy) is commonly included among the most important barriers for the success of m-Health. As a non-functional requirement for m-Health applications, security has received less attention than other technical issues that were more pressing at earlier development stages, such as reliability, eficiency, interoperability or usability. Another fact that has contributed to delaying the enforcement of robust security policies is that guaranteeing a certain security level implies costs that can be very relevant and that span along diferent dimensions. These include budgeting (e.g. the demand of extra hardware for user authentication), performance (e.g. lower eficiency and interoperability due to the addition of security elements) and usability (e.g. cumbersome configuration of devices and applications due to security options). Therefore, security solutions that aim to satisfy all the stakeholders in the m-Health context (users/patients, medical staff, technical staff, systems and devices manufacturers, regulators, etc.) shall be robust and, at the same time, minimize their associated costs. This Thesis details a proposal, composed of four interrelated blocks, to integrate appropriate levels of security in m-Health architectures in a cost-efcient manner. The first block designes a global scheme that provides different security and interoperability levels accordingto how critical are the m-Health applications to be implemented. This consists ofthree layers tailored to the m-Health domains and their constraints, whose security countermeasures defend against the threats of their associated m-Health applications. Next, the second block addresses the security extension of those standard protocols that enable the acquisition, exchange and/or management of biomedical information | thus, used by many m-Health applications | but do not meet the security levels described in the former scheme. These extensions are materialized for the biomedical standards ISO/IEEE 11073 PHD and SCP-ECG. Then, the third block proposes new ways of enhancing the security of biomedical standards, which are the centerpiece of many clinical m-Health applications, by means of novel codings. Finally the fourth block, with is parallel to the others, selects generic security methods (for user authentication and cryptographic protection) whose integration in the other blocks results optimal, and also develops novel signal-based methods (embedding and keytagging) for strengthening the security of biomedical tests. The layer-based extensions of the standards ISO/IEEE 11073 PHD and SCP-ECG can be considered as robust, cost-eficient and respectful with their original features and contents. The former adds no attributes to its data information model, four new frames to the service model |and extends four with new sub-frames|, and only one new sub-state to the communication model. Furthermore, a lightweight architecture consisting of a personal health device mounting a 9 MHz processor and an aggregator mounting a 1 GHz processor is enough to transmit a 3-lead electrocardiogram in real-time implementing the top security layer. The extra requirements associated to this extension are an initial configuration of the health device and the aggregator, tokens for identification/authentication of users if these devices are to be shared and the implementation of certain IHE profiles in the aggregator to enable the integration of measurements in healthcare systems. As regards to the extension of SCP-ECG, it only adds a new section with selected security elements and syntax in order to protect the rest of file contents and provide proper role-based access control. The overhead introduced in the protected SCP-ECG is typically 2{13 % of the regular file size, and the extra delays to protect a newly generated SCP-ECG file and to access it for interpretation are respectively a 2{10 % and a 5 % of the regular delays. As regards to the signal-based security techniques developed, the embedding method is the basis for the proposal of a generic coding for tests composed of biomedical signals, periodic measurements and contextual information. This has been adjusted and evaluated with electrocardiogram and electroencephalogram-based tests, proving the objective clinical quality of the coded tests, the capacity of the coding-access system to operate in real-time (overall delays of 2 s for electrocardiograms and 3.3 s for electroencephalograms) and its high usability. Despite of the embedding of security and metadata to enable m-Health services, the compression ratios obtained by this coding range from ' 3 in real-time transmission to ' 5 in offline operation. Complementarily, keytagging permits associating information to images (and other signals) by means of keys in a secure and non-distorting fashion, which has been availed to implement security measures such as image authentication, integrity control and location of tampered areas, private captioning with role-based access control, traceability and copyright protection. The tests conducted indicate a remarkable robustness-capacity tradeoff that permits implementing all this measures simultaneously, and the compatibility of keytagging with JPEG2000 compression, maintaining this tradeoff while setting the overall keytagging delay in only ' 120 ms for any image size | evidencing the scalability of this technique. As a general conclusion, it has been demonstrated and illustrated with examples that there are various, complementary and structured manners to contribute in the implementation of suitable security levels for m-Health architectures with a moderate cost in budget, performance, interoperability and usability. The m-Health landscape is evolving permanently along all their dimensions, and this Thesis aims to do so with its security. Furthermore, the lessons learned herein may offer further guidance for the elaboration of more comprehensive and updated security schemes, for the extension of other biomedical standards featuring low emphasis on security or privacy, and for the improvement of the state of the art regarding signal-based protection methods and applications

    Resource-Constrained Low-Complexity Video Coding for Wireless Transmission

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    An image capture system for use in telehealth

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