181,445 research outputs found

    Distributed coding of endoscopic video

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    Triggered by the challenging prerequisites of wireless capsule endoscopic video technology, this paper presents a novel distributed video coding (DVC) scheme, which employs an original hash-based side-information creation method at the decoder. In contrast to existing DVC schemes, the proposed codec generates high quality side-information at the decoder, even under the strenuous motion conditions encountered in endoscopic video. Performance evaluation using broad endoscopic video material shows that the proposed approach brings notable and consistent compression gains over various state-of-the-art video codecs at the additional benefit of vastly reduced encoding complexity

    Distributed video coding for wireless video sensor networks: a review of the state-of-the-art architectures

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    Distributed video coding (DVC) is a relatively new video coding architecture originated from two fundamental theorems namely, Slepian–Wolf and Wyner–Ziv. Recent research developments have made DVC attractive for applications in the emerging domain of wireless video sensor networks (WVSNs). This paper reviews the state-of-the-art DVC architectures with a focus on understanding their opportunities and gaps in addressing the operational requirements and application needs of WVSNs

    A concealment based approach to distributed video coding

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    Intra-WZ quantization mismatch in distributed video coding

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    During the past decade, Distributed Video Coding (DVC) has emerged as a new video coding paradigm, shifting the complexity from the encoder-to the decoder-side. This paper addresses a problem of current DVC architectures that has not been studied in the literature so far, that is, the mismatch between the intra and Wyner-Ziv (WZ) quantization processes. Due to this mismatch, WZ rate is spent even for spatial regions that are accurately approximated by the side-information. As a solution, this paper proposes side-information generation using selective unidirectional motion compensation from temporally adjacent WZ frames. Experimental results show that the proposed approach yields promising WZ rate gains of up to 7% relative to the conventional method

    Performance of a Distributed Video Codec Behaviours in Presence of Transmission Errors

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    Distributed Video Coding (DVC) is one of the most important and active research fields in video coding. The basic idea underlying DVC is to exploit the temporal correlation among frames directly in the decoding phase. The main properties of a distributed video coding system is that the computational load could in principle be shifted towards the decoder, with respect to a traditional video coding system. Anyway, the distributed coding approach has other interesting properties. In particular, one of the most promising benefits derived by the use of DVC is its natural error resilience to channel errors. Nevertheless, very few results on the actual error resilience properties of distributed video coding systems have been presented in literature. In this contribution we present a detailed analysis of the error resilience properties of a video coding system based on Stanford architecture. We analyze the behavior of such codec in presence of channel error, first focusing on the effect of such errors on the different parts of the encoded stream, and then making a preliminary comparison with H264

    Distributed Video Coding for Multiview and Video-plus-depth Coding

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    Demo : distributed video coding applications in wireless multimedia sensor networks

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    Novel distributed video coding (DVC) architectures developed by the IBBT DVC group realize state-of-the-art video coding efficiency under stringent energy restrictions, while supporting error-resilience and scalability. Therefore, these architectures are particularly attractive for application scenarios involving low-complexity energy-constrained wireless visual sensors. This demo presents the scenarios, which are considered to be the most promising areas of integration for IBBT's DVC systems, considering feasibility and commercial applicability

    Distributed Video Coding: Iterative Improvements

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