5 research outputs found

    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

    Joint successive correlation estimation and side information refinement in distributed video coding

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    This paper presents a novel hash-based distributed video coding (DVC) scheme that combines an accurate online correlation channel estimation (CCE) algorithm with an efficient side information refinement strategy, delivering state-of-the-art compression performance. The proposed DVC scheme applies layered bit-plane Wyner-Ziv coding and successively refines the CCE bit-plane-per-bit-plane during decoding. In addition, the side information is successively refined upon decoding of distinct refinement levels, grouping specific frequency bands of the discrete cosine transform. The proposed system not only outperforms the benchmark in DVC but several state-of-the-art side information refinement techniques and CCE methods as well

    Improving the Rate-Distortion Performance in Distributed Video Coding

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    Distributed video coding is a coding paradigm, which allows encoding of video frames at a complexity that is substantially lower than that in conventional video coding schemes. This feature makes it suitable for some emerging applications such as wireless surveillance video and mobile camera phones. In distributed video coding, a subset of frames in the video sequence, known as the key frames, are encoded using a conventional intra-frame encoder, such as H264/AVC in the intra mode, and then transmitted to the decoder. The remaining frames, known as the Wyner-Ziv frames, are encoded based on the Wyner-Ziv principle by using the channel codes, such as LDPC codes. In the transform-domain distributed video coding, each Wyner-Ziv frame undergoes a 4x4 block DCT transform and the resulting DCT coefficients are grouped into DCT bands. The bitplaines corresponding to each DCT band are encoded by a channel encoder, for example an LDPCA encoder, one after another. The resulting error-correcting bits are retained in a buffer at the encoder and transmitted incrementally as needed by the decoder. At the decoder, the key frames are first decoded. The decoded key frames are then used to generate a side information frame as an initial estimate of the corresponding Wyner-Ziv frame, usually by employing an interpolation method. The difference between the DCT band in the side information frame and the corresponding one in the Wyner-Ziv frame, referred to as the correlation noise, is often modeled by Laplacian distribution. A soft-input information for each bit in the bitplane is obtained using this correlation noise model and the corresponding DCT band of the side information frame. The channel decoder then uses this soft-input information along with some error-correcting bits sent by the encoder to decode the bitplanes of each DCT band in each of the Wyner-Ziv frames. Hence, an accurate estimation of the correlation noise model parameter(s) and generation of high-quality side information are required for reliable soft-input information for the bitplanes in the decoder, which in turn leads to a more efficient decoding. Consequently, less error-correcting bits need to be transmitted from the encoder to the decoder to decode the bitplanes, leading to a better compression efficiency and rate-distortion performance. The correlation noise is not stationary and its statistics vary within each Wyner-Ziv frame and within its corresponding DCT bands. Hence, it is difficult to find an accurate model for the correlation noise and estimate its parameters precisely at the decoder. Moreover, in existing schemes the parameters of the correlation noise for each DCT band are estimated before the decoder starts to decode the bitplanes of that DCT band and they are not modified and kept unchanged during decoding process of the bitplanes. Another problem of concern is that, since side information frame is generated in the decoder using the temporal interpolation between the previously decoded frames, the quality of the side information frames is generally poor when the motions between the frames are non-linear. Hence, generating a high-quality side information is a challenging problem. This thesis is concerned with the study of accurate estimation of correlation noise model parameters and increasing in the quality of the side information from the standpoint of improving the rate-distortion performance in distributed video coding. A new scheme is proposed for the estimation of the correlation noise parameters wherein the decoder decodes simultaneously all the bitplanes of a DCT band in a Wyner-Ziv frame and then refines the parameters of the correlation noise model of the band in an iterative manner. This process is carried out on an augmented factor graph using a new recursive message passing algorithm, with the side information generated and kept unchanged during the decoding of the Wyner-Ziv frame. Extensive simulations are carried out showing that the proposed decoder leads to an improved rate-distortion performance in comparison to the original DISCOVER codec and in another DVC codec employing side information frame refinement, particularly for video sequences with high motion content. In the second part of this work, a new algorithm for the generation of the side information is proposed to refine the initial side information frame using the additional information obtained after decoding the previous DCT bands of a Wyner-Ziv frame. The simulations are carried out demonstrating that the proposed algorithm provides a performance superior to that of schemes employing the other side information refinement mechanisms. Finally, it is shown that incorporating the proposed algorithm for refining the side information into the decoder proposed in the first part of the thesis leads to a further improvement in the rate-distortion performance of the DVC codec
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