6,159 research outputs found
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Robust Adaptive Intra Refresh for Multiview Video
Transmission error propagation in wireless multimedia communication systems has become a recurring
problem. This persistent problem has led to grave consequences on the visual quality of the decoded video.
It is against this backdrop that, we present an adaptive intra refresh (AIR) error-resilient coding tool to
mitigate the effect of transmission error propagation in 3D video communications. This work utilizes
periodic insertion of intra macroblocks in badly error-infected frames temporally as well as related frames
in the multi view video scheme. Our objective is to maximize the transmission efficiency while ensuring the
transmission robustness of the coded bitstream. The selection of periodic macroblocks is based on areas
with high motion above a pre-set threshold. The coding modes of the macroblocks are based on the
distortion expectation due to transmission errors. Extensive simulation results show significant
improvement in both objective and subjective video quality at different intra refresh rates
Loss-resilient Coding of Texture and Depth for Free-viewpoint Video Conferencing
Free-viewpoint video conferencing allows a participant to observe the remote
3D scene from any freely chosen viewpoint. An intermediate virtual viewpoint
image is commonly synthesized using two pairs of transmitted texture and depth
maps from two neighboring captured viewpoints via depth-image-based rendering
(DIBR). To maintain high quality of synthesized images, it is imperative to
contain the adverse effects of network packet losses that may arise during
texture and depth video transmission. Towards this end, we develop an
integrated approach that exploits the representation redundancy inherent in the
multiple streamed videos a voxel in the 3D scene visible to two captured views
is sampled and coded twice in the two views. In particular, at the receiver we
first develop an error concealment strategy that adaptively blends
corresponding pixels in the two captured views during DIBR, so that pixels from
the more reliable transmitted view are weighted more heavily. We then couple it
with a sender-side optimization of reference picture selection (RPS) during
real-time video coding, so that blocks containing samples of voxels that are
visible in both views are more error-resiliently coded in one view only, given
adaptive blending will erase errors in the other view. Further, synthesized
view distortion sensitivities to texture versus depth errors are analyzed, so
that relative importance of texture and depth code blocks can be computed for
system-wide RPS optimization. Experimental results show that the proposed
scheme can outperform the use of a traditional feedback channel by up to 0.82
dB on average at 8% packet loss rate, and by as much as 3 dB for particular
frames
An efficient error resilience scheme based on wyner-ziv coding for region-of-Interest protection of wavelet based video transmission
In this paper, we propose a bandwidth efficient error resilience scheme for wavelet based video
transmission over wireless channel by introducing an additional Wyner-Ziv (WZ) stream to protect region of
interest (ROI) in a frame. In the proposed architecture, the main video stream is compressed by a generic
wavelet domain coding structure and passed through the error prone channel without any protection.
Meanwhile, the predefined ROI area related wavelet coefficients obtained after an integer wavelet transform
will be specially protected by WZ codec in an additional channel during transmission. At the decoder side, the error-prone ROI related wavelet coefficients will be used as side information to help decoding the WZ stream. Different size of WZ bit streams can be applied in order to meet different bandwidth condition and different
requirement of end users. The simulation results clearly revealed that the proposed scheme has distinct advantages in saving bandwidth comparing with fully applied FEC algorithm to whole video stream and in the meantime offer the robust transmission over error prone channel for certain video applications
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Research and developments of Dirac video codec
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University.In digital video compression, apart from storage, successful transmission of the compressed video
data over the bandwidth limited erroneous channels is another important issue. To enable a video
codec for broadcasting application, it is required to implement the corresponding coding tools (e.g.
error-resilient coding, rate control etc.). They are normally non-normative parts of a video codec and
hence their specifications are not defined in the standard. In Dirac as well, the original codec is
optimized for storage purpose only and so, several non-normative part of the encoding tools are still
required in order to be able to use in other types of application.
Being the "Research and Developments of the Dirac Video Codec" as the research title, phase I of
the project is mainly focused on the error-resilient transmission over a noisy channel. The error-resilient
coding method used here is a simple and low complex coding scheme which provides the
error-resilient transmission of the compressed video bitstream of Dirac video encoder over the packet
erasure wired network. The scheme combines source and channel coding approach where error-resilient
source coding is achieved by data partitioning in the wavelet transformed domain and
channel coding is achieved through the application of either Rate-Compatible Punctured
Convolutional (RCPC) Code or Turbo Code (TC) using un-equal error protection between header plus
MV and data. The scheme is designed mainly for the packet-erasure channel, i.e. targeted for the
Internet broadcasting application.
But, for a bandwidth limited channel, it is still required to limit the amount of bits generated from
the encoder depending on the available bandwidth in addition to the error-resilient coding. So, in the
2nd phase of the project, a rate control algorithm is presented. The algorithm is based upon the Quality
Factor (QF) optimization method where QF of the encoded video is adaptively changing in order to
achieve average bitrate which is constant over each Group of Picture (GOP). A relation between the
bitrate, R and the QF, which is called Rate-QF (R-QF) model is derived in order to estimate the
optimum QF of the current encoding frame for a given target bitrate, R.
In some applications like video conferencing, real-time encoding and decoding with minimum
delay is crucial, but, the ability to do real-time encoding/decoding is largely determined by the
complexity of the encoder/decoder. As we all know that motion estimation process inside the encoder
is the most time consuming stage. So, reducing the complexity of the motion estimation stage will
certainly give one step closer to the real-time application. So, as a partial contribution toward realtime
application, in the final phase of the research, a fast Motion Estimation (ME) strategy is designed
and implemented. It is the combination of modified adaptive search plus semi-hierarchical way of
motion estimation. The same strategy was implemented in both Dirac and H.264 in order to
investigate its performance on different codecs. Together with this fast ME strategy, a method which
is called partial cost function calculation in order to further reduce down the computational load of the
cost function calculation was presented. The calculation is based upon the pre-defined set of patterns
which were chosen in such a way that they have as much maximum coverage as possible over the
whole block.
In summary, this research work has contributed to the error-resilient transmission of compressed
bitstreams of Dirac video encoder over a bandwidth limited error prone channel. In addition to this,
the final phase of the research has partially contributed toward the real-time application of the Dirac
video codec by implementing a fast motion estimation strategy together with partial cost function
calculation idea.BBC R&D and Brunel University
Resilient Digital Video Transmission over Wireless Channels using Pixel-Level Artefact Detection Mechanisms
Recent advances in communications and video coding technology have brought multimedia communications into everyday life, where a variety of services and applications are being integrated within different devices such that multimedia content is provided everywhere and on any device. H.264/AVC provides a major advance on preceding video coding standards obtaining as much as twice the coding efficiency over these standards (Richardson I.E.G., 2003, Wiegand T. & Sullivan G.J., 2007). Furthermore, this new codec inserts video related information within network abstraction layer units (NALUs), which facilitates the transmission of H.264/AVC coded sequences over a variety of network environments (Stockhammer, T. & Hannuksela M.M., 2005) making it applicable for a broad range of applications such as TV broadcasting, mobile TV, video-on-demand, digital media storage, high definition TV, multimedia streaming and conversational applications. Real-time wireless conversational and broadcast applications are particularly challenging as, in general, reliable delivery cannot be guaranteed (Stockhammer, T. & Hannuksela M.M., 2005). The H.264/AVC standard specifies several error resilient strategies to minimise the effect of transmission errors on the perceptual quality of the reconstructed video sequences. However, these methods assume a packet-loss scenario where the receiver discards and conceals all the video information contained within a corrupted NALU packet. This implies that the error resilient methods adopted by the standard operate at a lower bound since not all the information contained within a corrupted NALU packet is un-utilizable (Stockhammer, T. et al., 2003).peer-reviewe
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