77 research outputs found

    Video coding for compression and content-based functionality

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    The lifetime of this research project has seen two dramatic developments in the area of digital video coding. The first has been the progress of compression research leading to a factor of two improvement over existing standards, much wider deployment possibilities and the development of the new international ITU-T Recommendation H.263. The second has been a radical change in the approach to video content production with the introduction of the content-based coding concept and the addition of scene composition information to the encoded bit-stream. Content-based coding is central to the latest international standards efforts from the ISO/IEC MPEG working group. This thesis reports on extensions to existing compression techniques exploiting a priori knowledge about scene content. Existing, standardised, block-based compression coding techniques were extended with work on arithmetic entropy coding and intra-block prediction. These both form part of the H.263 and MPEG-4 specifications respectively. Object-based coding techniques were developed within a collaborative simulation model, known as SIMOC, then extended with ideas on grid motion vector modelling and vector accuracy confidence estimation. An improved confidence measure for encouraging motion smoothness is proposed. Object-based coding ideas, with those from other model and layer-based coding approaches, influenced the development of content-based coding within MPEG-4. This standard made considerable progress in this newly adopted content based video coding field defining normative techniques for arbitrary shape and texture coding. The means to generate this information, the analysis problem, for the content to be coded was intentionally not specified. Further research work in this area concentrated on video segmentation and analysis techniques to exploit the benefits of content based coding for generic frame based video. The work reported here introduces the use of a clustering algorithm on raw data features for providing initial segmentation of video data and subsequent tracking of those image regions through video sequences. Collaborative video analysis frameworks from COST 21 l qual and MPEG-4, combining results from many other segmentation schemes, are also introduced

    360-Degree Panoramic Video Coding

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    Virtual reality (VR) creates an immersive experience of real world in virtual environment through computer interface. Due to the technological advancements in recent years, VR technology is growing very fast and as a result industrial usage of this technology is feasible nowadays. This technology is being used in many applications for example gaming, education, streaming live events, etc. Since VR is visualizing the real world experience, the image or video content which is used must represent the whole 3D world characteristics. Omnidirectional images/videos demonstrate such characteristics and hence are used in VR applications. However, these contents are not suitable for conventional video coding standards, which use only 2D image/video format content. Accordingly, the omnidirectional content are projected onto a 2D image plane using cylindrical or pseudo-cylindrical projections. In this work, coding methods for two types of projection formats that are popular among the VR contents are studied: Equirectangular panoramic projection and Pseudo-cylindrical panoramic projection. The equirectangular projection is the most commonly used format in VR applications due to its rectangular image plane and also wide support in software development environments. However, this projection stretches the nadir and zenith areas of the panorama and as a result contain a relatively large portion of redundant data in these areas. The redundant information causes extra bitrate and also higher encoding/decoding time. Regional downsampling (RDS) methods are used in this work in order to decrease the extra bitrate caused by over-stretched polar areas. These methods are categorized into persistent regional down-sampling (P-RDS) and temporal regional down-sampling (T-RDS) methods. In the P-RDS method, the down-sampling is applied to all frames of the video, but in the T-RDS method, only inter frames are down-sampled and the intra frames are coded in full resolution format in order to maintain the highest possible quality of these frames. The pseudo-cylindrical projections map the 3D spherical domain to a non-rectangular 2D image plane in which the polar areas do not have redundant information. Therefore, the more realistic sample distribution of 3D world is achieved by using these projection formats. However, because of non-rectangular image plane format, pseudocylindrical panoramas are not favorable for image/video coding standards and as a result the compression performance is not efficient. Therefore, two methods are investigated for improving the intra-frame and inter-frame compression of these panorama formats. In the intra-frame coding method, border edges are smoothed by modifying the content of the image in non-effective picture area. In the interframe coding method, gaining the benefit of 360-degree property of the content, non-effective picture area of reference frames at the border is filled with the content of the effective picture area from the opposite border to improve the performance of motion compensation. As a final contribution, the quality assessment methods in VR applications are studied. Since the VR content are mainly displayed in head mounted displays (HMDs) which use 3D coordinate system, measuring the quality of decoded image/video with conventional methods does not represent the quality fairly. In this work, spherical quality metrics are investigated for measuring the quality of the proposed coding methods of omnidirectional panoramas. Moreover, a novel spherical quality metric (USS-PSNR) is proposed for evaluating the quality of VR images/video

    Adaptive video delivery using semantics

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    The diffusion of network appliances such as cellular phones, personal digital assistants and hand-held computers has created the need to personalize the way media content is delivered to the end user. Moreover, recent devices, such as digital radio receivers with graphics displays, and new applications, such as intelligent visual surveillance, require novel forms of video analysis for content adaptation and summarization. To cope with these challenges, we propose an automatic method for the extraction of semantics from video, and we present a framework that exploits these semantics in order to provide adaptive video delivery. First, an algorithm that relies on motion information to extract multiple semantic video objects is proposed. The algorithm operates in two stages. In the first stage, a statistical change detector produces the segmentation of moving objects from the background. This process is robust with regard to camera noise and does not need manual tuning along a sequence or for different sequences. In the second stage, feedbacks between an object partition and a region partition are used to track individual objects along the frames. These interactions allow us to cope with multiple, deformable objects, occlusions, splitting, appearance and disappearance of objects, and complex motion. Subsequently, semantics are used to prioritize visual data in order to improve the performance of adaptive video delivery. The idea behind this approach is to organize the content so that a particular network or device does not inhibit the main content message. Specifically, we propose two new video adaptation strategies. The first strategy combines semantic analysis with a traditional frame-based video encoder. Background simplifications resulting from this approach do not penalize overall quality at low bitrates. The second strategy uses metadata to efficiently encode the main content message. The metadata-based representation of object's shape and motion suffices to convey the meaning and action of a scene when the objects are familiar. The impact of different video adaptation strategies is then quantified with subjective experiments. We ask a panel of human observers to rate the quality of adapted video sequences on a normalized scale. From these results, we further derive an objective quality metric, the semantic peak signal-to-noise ratio (SPSNR), that accounts for different image areas and for their relevance to the observer in order to reflect the focus of attention of the human visual system. At last, we determine the adaptation strategy that provides maximum value for the end user by maximizing the SPSNR for given client resources at the time of delivery. By combining semantic video analysis and adaptive delivery, the solution presented in this dissertation permits the distribution of video in complex media environments and supports a large variety of content-based applications

    Compressed-domain transcoding of H.264/AVC and SVC video streams

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    Novel block-based motion estimation and segmentation for video coding

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    Codage de cartes de profondeur par deformation de courbes elastiques

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    In multiple-view video plus depth, depth maps can be represented by means of grayscale images and the corresponding temporal sequence can be thought as a standard grayscale video sequence. However depth maps have different properties from natural images: they present large areas of smooth surfaces separated by sharp edges. Arguably the most important information lies in object contours, as a consequence an interesting approach consists in performing a lossless coding of the contour map, possibly followed by a lossy coding of per-object depth values.In this context, we propose a new technique for the lossless coding of object contours, based on the elastic deformation of curves. A continuous evolution of elastic deformations between two reference contour curves can be modelled, and an elastically deformed version of the reference contours can be sent to the decoder with an extremely small coding cost and used as side information to improve the lossless coding of the actual contour. After the main discontinuities have been captured by the contour description, the depth field inside each region is rather smooth. We proposed and tested two different techniques for the coding of the depth field inside each region. The first technique performs the shape-adaptive wavelet transform followed by the shape-adaptive version of SPIHT. The second technique performs a prediction of the depth field from its subsampled version and the set of coded contours. It is generally recognized that a high quality view rendering at the receiver side is possible only by preserving the contour information, since distortions on edges during the encoding step would cause a sensible degradation on the synthesized view and on the 3D perception. We investigated this claim by conducting a subjective quality assessment test to compare an object-based technique and a hybrid block-based techniques for the coding of depth maps.Dans le format multiple-view video plus depth, les cartes de profondeur peuvent être représentées comme des images en niveaux de gris et la séquence temporelle correspondante peut être considérée comme une séquence vidéo standard en niveaux de gris. Cependant les cartes de profondeur ont des propriétés différentes des images naturelles: ils présentent de grandes surfaces lisses séparées par des arêtes vives. On peut dire que l'information la plus importante réside dans les contours de l'objet, en conséquence une approche intéressante consiste à effectuer un codage sans perte de la carte de contour, éventuellement suivie d'un codage lossy des valeurs de profondeur par-objet.Dans ce contexte, nous proposons une nouvelle technique pour le codage sans perte des contours de l'objet, basée sur la déformation élastique des courbes. Une évolution continue des déformations élastiques peut être modélisée entre deux courbes de référence, et une version du contour déformée élastiquement peut être envoyé au décodeur avec un coût de codage très faible et utilisé comme information latérale pour améliorer le codage sans perte du contour réel. Après que les principales discontinuités ont été capturés par la description du contour, la profondeur à l'intérieur de chaque région est assez lisse. Nous avons proposé et testé deux techniques différentes pour le codage du champ de profondeur à l'intérieur de chaque région. La première technique utilise la version adaptative à la forme de la transformation en ondelette, suivie par la version adaptative à la forme de SPIHT.La seconde technique effectue une prédiction du champ de profondeur à partir de sa version sous-échantillonnée et l'ensemble des contours codés. Il est généralement reconnu qu'un rendu de haute qualité au récepteur pour un nouveau point de vue est possible que avec la préservation de l'information de contour, car des distorsions sur les bords lors de l'étape de codage entraînerait une dégradation évidente sur la vue synthétisée et sur la perception 3D. Nous avons étudié cette affirmation en effectuant un test d'évaluation de la qualité perçue en comparant, pour le codage des cartes de profondeur, une technique basée sur la compression d'objects et une techniques de codage vidéo hybride à blocs

    Efficient HEVC-based video adaptation using transcoding

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    In a video transmission system, it is important to take into account the great diversity of the network/end-user constraints. On the one hand, video content is typically streamed over a network that is characterized by different bandwidth capacities. In many cases, the bandwidth is insufficient to transfer the video at its original quality. On the other hand, a single video is often played by multiple devices like PCs, laptops, and cell phones. Obviously, a single video would not satisfy their different constraints. These diversities of the network and devices capacity lead to the need for video adaptation techniques, e.g., a reduction of the bit rate or spatial resolution. Video transcoding, which modifies a property of the video without the change of the coding format, has been well-known as an efficient adaptation solution. However, this approach comes along with a high computational complexity, resulting in huge energy consumption in the network and possibly network latency. This presentation provides several optimization strategies for the transcoding process of HEVC (the latest High Efficiency Video Coding standard) video streams. First, the computational complexity of a bit rate transcoder (transrater) is reduced. We proposed several techniques to speed-up the encoder of a transrater, notably a machine-learning-based approach and a novel coding-mode evaluation strategy have been proposed. Moreover, the motion estimation process of the encoder has been optimized with the use of decision theory and the proposed fast search patterns. Second, the issues and challenges of a spatial transcoder have been solved by using machine-learning algorithms. Thanks to their great performance, the proposed techniques are expected to significantly help HEVC gain popularity in a wide range of modern multimedia applications

    Using contour information and segmentation for object registration, modeling and retrieval

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    This thesis considers different aspects of the utilization of contour information and syntactic and semantic image segmentation for object registration, modeling and retrieval in the context of content-based indexing and retrieval in large collections of images. Target applications include retrieval in collections of closed silhouettes, holistic w ord recognition in handwritten historical manuscripts and shape registration. Also, the thesis explores the feasibility of contour-based syntactic features for improving the correspondence of the output of bottom-up segmentation to semantic objects present in the scene and discusses the feasibility of different strategies for image analysis utilizing contour information, e.g. segmentation driven by visual features versus segmentation driven by shape models or semi-automatic in selected application scenarios. There are three contributions in this thesis. The first contribution considers structure analysis based on the shape and spatial configuration of image regions (socalled syntactic visual features) and their utilization for automatic image segmentation. The second contribution is the study of novel shape features, matching algorithms and similarity measures. Various applications of the proposed solutions are presented throughout the thesis providing the basis for the third contribution which is a discussion of the feasibility of different recognition strategies utilizing contour information. In each case, the performance and generality of the proposed approach has been analyzed based on extensive rigorous experimentation using as large as possible test collections

    Analog parallel processor solutions for video encoding

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    This thesis deals with Cellular Nonlinear Network (CNN) analog parallel processor networks and their implementations in current video coding standards. The target applications are low-power video encoders within 3rd generation mobile terminals. The video codecs of such mobile terminals are defined by either the MPEG-4/H.263 or H.264 video standard. All of these standards are based on the block-based hybrid approach. As block-based motion estimation (ME) is responsible for most of the power consumption of such hybrid video encoders, this thesis deals mostly with low-power ME implementations. Low-power solutions are introduced at both the algorithmic and hardware levels. On the algorithmic level, the introduced implementations are derived from a segmentation algorithm, which has previously been partly realized. The first introduced algorithm reduces the computational complexity of ME within an object-based MPEG-4 encoder. The use of this algorithm enables a 60% drop in the power consumption of Full Search ME. The second algorithm calculates a near-optimal block-size partition for H.264 motion estimation. With this algorithm, the use of computationally complex Lagrange optimization in H.264 ME is not required. The third algorithm reduces the shape bit-rate of an object-based MPEG-4 encoder. On the hardware level a CNN-type ME architecture is introduced. The architecture includes connections and circuitry to fully realize block-based ME. The analog ME implemented with this architecture is capable of lower power than comparable digital realizations. A 9×9 test chip has also been realized. Additionally implemented is a digital predictive ME realization that takes advantage of the introduced partition algorithm. Although the IC layout of the ME algorithm was drawn, the design was verified as an FPGA.reviewe
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