143 research outputs found
Lossless Intra Coding in HEVC with 3-tap Filters
This paper presents a pixel-by-pixel spatial prediction method for lossless
intra coding within High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC). A well-known previous
pixel-by-pixel spatial prediction method uses only two neighboring pixels for
prediction, based on the angular projection idea borrowed from block-based
intra prediction in lossy coding. This paper explores a method which uses three
neighboring pixels for prediction according to a two-dimensional correlation
model, and the used neighbor pixels and prediction weights change depending on
intra mode. To find the best prediction weights for each intra mode, a
two-stage offline optimization algorithm is used and a number of implementation
aspects are discussed to simplify the proposed prediction method. The proposed
method is implemented in the HEVC reference software and experimental results
show that the explored 3-tap filtering method can achieve an average 11.34%
bitrate reduction over the default lossless intra coding in HEVC. The proposed
method also decreases average decoding time by 12.7% while it increases average
encoding time by 9.7%Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Increased compression efficiency of AVC and HEVC CABAC by precise statistics estimation
The paper presents Improved Adaptive Arithmetic Coding algorithm for application in future video compression technology. The proposed solution is based on the Context-based Adaptive Binary Arithmetic Coding (CABAC) technique and uses the authors’ mechanism of symbols probability estimation that exploits Context-Tree Weighting (CTW) technique. This paper proposes the version of the algorithm, that allows an arbitrary selection of depth of context trees, when activating the algorithm in the framework of the AVC or HEVC video encoders. The algorithm has been tested in terms of coding efficiency of data and its computational complexity. Results showed, that depending of depth of context trees from 0.1% to 0.86% reduction of bitrate is achieved, when using the algorithm in the HEVC video encoder and 0.4% to 2.3% compression gain in the case of the AVC. The new solution increases complexity of entropy encoder itself, however, this does not translate into increase the complexity of the whole video encoder
Frequency-dependent perceptual quantisation for visually lossless compression applications
The default quantisation algorithms in the state-of-the-art High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) standard, namely Uniform Reconstruction Quantisation (URQ) and Rate-Distortion Optimised Quantisation (RDOQ), do not take into account the perceptual relevance of individual transform coefficients. In this paper, a Frequency-Dependent Perceptual Quantisation (FDPQ) technique for HEVC is proposed. FDPQ exploits the well-established Modulation Transfer Function (MTF) characteristics of the linear transformation basis functions by taking into account the Euclidean distance of an AC transform coefficient from the DC coefficient. As such, in luma and chroma Cb and Cr Transform Blocks (TBs), FDPQ quantises more coarsely the least perceptually relevant transform coefficients (i.e., the high frequency AC coefficients). Conversely, FDPQ preserves the integrity of the DC coefficient and the very low frequency AC coefficients. Compared with RDOQ, which is the most widely used transform coefficient-level quantisation technique in video coding, FDPQ successfully achieves bitrate reductions of up to 41%. Furthermore, the subjective evaluations confirm that the FDPQ-coded video data is perceptually indistinguishable (i.e., visually lossless) from the raw video data for a given Quantisation Parameter (QP)
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