9,795 research outputs found

    Motion estimation and CABAC VLSI co-processors for real-time high-quality H.264/AVC video coding

    Get PDF
    Real-time and high-quality video coding is gaining a wide interest in the research and industrial community for different applications. H.264/AVC, a recent standard for high performance video coding, can be successfully exploited in several scenarios including digital video broadcasting, high-definition TV and DVD-based systems, which require to sustain up to tens of Mbits/s. To that purpose this paper proposes optimized architectures for H.264/AVC most critical tasks, Motion estimation and context adaptive binary arithmetic coding. Post synthesis results on sub-micron CMOS standard-cells technologies show that the proposed architectures can actually process in real-time 720 Ă— 480 video sequences at 30 frames/s and grant more than 50 Mbits/s. The achieved circuit complexity and power consumption budgets are suitable for their integration in complex VLSI multimedia systems based either on AHB bus centric on-chip communication system or on novel Network-on-Chip (NoC) infrastructures for MPSoC (Multi-Processor System on Chip

    Bacterial phase variation associated with repetitive DNA

    Get PDF
    Phase variation is mechanism of phenotypic switching used by many pathogenic bacterial species. This thesis describes work on three aspects of phase variation. Mathematical models are described which can be used to determine the rate of phase variation and subsequently the influence of variation rate and fitness differences associated with the altered phenotype on population structure. An approach to whole genome analysis has been developed which has been used to identify putative phase variable contingency genes in H. pylori, T. pallidum and N. meningitidis. This has identified many new contingency genes likely to be involved in host - bacterium and bacterium population interactions. Finally, a detailed molecular investigation of the promoter of the phase variable opc gene of N. meningitidis is presented. In this it is shown that the promoter located homopolymeric tract controls transcription by affecting the relative spacing and facing of promoter components, that this determines RNA polymerase binding to the promoter, and that this interaction involves direct contact of the α-subunit of RNA polymerase with the promoter. In addition it is shown that transcription is dependent upon an IHF consensus sequence in the opc promoter
    • …
    corecore