36 research outputs found

    Influence of packets losses on video quality in case of using multiple description coding with time division into two and three substreams

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    The paper presents analysis of simultaneous use of multiple description coding (MDC) algorithm and multipath routing for IP-based videoconferencing system. Experimental results are given for time division of video stream in two and three substreams, compressed by H.264 codec with different quality factors (Q) and different packet loss rates in network (from 0% to 50%). Video quality is estimated with the use of two reference quality criterions: Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR) and Video Quality Metric (VQM)

    A Survey on Multimedia-Based Cross-Layer Optimization in Visual Sensor Networks

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    Visual sensor networks (VSNs) comprised of battery-operated electronic devices endowed with low-resolution cameras have expanded the applicability of a series of monitoring applications. Those types of sensors are interconnected by ad hoc error-prone wireless links, imposing stringent restrictions on available bandwidth, end-to-end delay and packet error rates. In such context, multimedia coding is required for data compression and error-resilience, also ensuring energy preservation over the path(s) toward the sink and improving the end-to-end perceptual quality of the received media. Cross-layer optimization may enhance the expected efficiency of VSNs applications, disrupting the conventional information flow of the protocol layers. When the inner characteristics of the multimedia coding techniques are exploited by cross-layer protocols and architectures, higher efficiency may be obtained in visual sensor networks. This paper surveys recent research on multimedia-based cross-layer optimization, presenting the proposed strategies and mechanisms for transmission rate adjustment, congestion control, multipath selection, energy preservation and error recovery. We note that many multimedia-based cross-layer optimization solutions have been proposed in recent years, each one bringing a wealth of contributions to visual sensor networks

    Application-Specific Path Switching: A Case Study for Streaming Video

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    The focus of this paper is on improving the quality of streaming video transmitted over the Internet. The approach we investigate assumes the availability of multiple paths between the source and the destination, and dynamically selects the best one. Although this is not a new concept, our contribution is in estimating the goodness of a path from the perspective of the video stream, instead of relying only on raw network performance measures. The paper starts by showing that the use of raw network performance data to control path switching decisions can often result in poor choices from an application perspective, and then proceeds to develop a practical approach for evaluating, in real-time, the performance of different paths in terms of video quality. Those estimates are used to continuously select the path that yields the best possible transmission conditions for video streaming applications. We demonstrate the feasibility and performance of the scheme through experiments involving different types of videos

    Diseño centrado en calidad para la difusión Peer-to-Peer de video en vivo

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    El uso de redes Peer-to-Peer (P2P) es una forma escalable para ofrecer servicios de video sobre Internet. Este documento hace foco en la definiciĂłn, desarrollo y evaluaciĂłn de una arquitectura P2P para distribuir video en vivo. El diseño global de la red es guiado por la calidad de experiencia (Quality of Experience - QoE), cuyo principal componente en este caso es la calidad del video percibida por los usuarios finales, en lugar del tradicional diseño basado en la calidad de servicio (Quality of Service - QoE) de la mayorĂ­a de los sistemas. Para medir la calidad percibida del video, en tiempo real y automĂĄticamente, extendimos la recientemente propuesta metodologĂ­a Pseudo-Subjective Quality Assessment (PSQA). Dos grandes lĂ­neas de investigaciĂłn son desarrolladas. Primero, proponemos una tĂ©cnica de distribuciĂłn de video desde mĂșltiples fuentes con las caracterĂ­sticas de poder ser optimizada para maximizar la calidad percibida en contextos de muchas fallas y de poseer muy baja señalizaciĂłn (a diferencia de los sistemas existentes). Desarrollamos una metodologĂ­a, basada en PSQA, que nos permite un control fino sobre la forma en que la señal de video es dividida en partes y la cantidad de redundancia agregada, como una funciĂłn de la dinĂĄmica de los usuarios de la red. De esta forma es posible mejorar la robustez del sistema tanto como sea deseado, contemplando el lĂ­mite de capacidad en la comunicaciĂłn. En segundo lugar, presentamos un mecanismo estructurado para controlar la topologĂ­a de la red. La selecciĂłn de que usuarios servirĂĄn a que otros es importante para la robustez de la red, especialmente cuando los usuarios son heterogĂ©neos en sus capacidades y en sus tiempos de conexiĂłn.Nuestro diseño maximiza la calidad global esperada (evaluada usando PSQA), seleccionado una topologĂ­a que mejora la robustez del sistema. AdemĂĄs estudiamos como extender la red con dos servicios complementarios: el video bajo demanda (Video on Demand - VoD) y el servicio MyTV. El desafĂ­o en estos servicios es como realizar bĂșsquedas eficientes sobre la librerĂ­a de videos, dado al alto dinamismo del contenido. Presentamos una estrategia de "caching" para las bĂșsquedas en estos servicios, que maximiza el nĂșmero total de respuestas correctas a las consultas, considerando una dinĂĄmica particular en los contenidos y restricciones de ancho de banda. Nuestro diseño global considera escenarios reales, donde los casos de prueba y los parĂĄmetros de configuraciĂłn surgen de datos reales de un servicio de referencia en producciĂłn. Nuestro prototipo es completamente funcional, de uso gratuito, y basado en tecnologĂ­as bien probadas de cĂłdigo abierto

    Video transport optimization techniques design and evaluation for next generation cellular networks

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    Video is foreseen to be the dominant type of data traffic in the Internet. This vision is supported by a number of studies which forecast that video traffic will drastically increase in the following years, surpassing Peer-to-Peer traffic in volume already in the current year. Current infrastructures are not prepared to deal with this traffic increase. The current Internet, and in particular the mobile Internet, was not designed with video requirements in mind and, as a consequence, its architecture is very inefficient for handling this volume of video traffic. When a large part of traffic is associated to multimedia entertainment, most of the mobile infrastructure is used in a very inefficient way to provide such a simple service, thereby saturating the whole cellular network, and leading to perceived quality levels that are not adequate to support widespread end user acceptance. The main goal of the research activity in this thesis is to evolve the mobile Internet architecture for efficient video traffic support. As video is expected to represent the majority of the traffic, the future architecture should efficiently support the requirements of this data type, and specific enhancements for video should be introduced at all layers of the protocol stack where needed. These enhancements need to cater for improved quality of experience, improved reliability in a mobile world (anywhere, anytime), lower exploitation cost, and increased flexibility. In this thesis a set of video delivery mechanisms are designed to optimize the video transmission at different layers of the protocol stack and at different levels of the cellular network. Upon the architectural choices, resource allocation schemes are implemented to support a range of video applications, which cover video broadcast/multicast streaming, video on demand, real-time streaming, video progressive download and video upstreaming. By means of simulation, the benefits of the designed mechanisms in terms of perceived video quality and network resource saving are shown and compared to existing solutions. Furthermore, selected modules are implemented in a real testbed and some experimental results are provided to support the development of such transport mechanisms in practice

    Scalable reliable on-demand media streaming protocols

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    This thesis considers the problem of delivering streaming media, on-demand, to potentially large numbers of concurrent clients. The problem has motivated the development in prior work of scalable protocols based on multicast or broadcast. However, previous protocols do not allow clients to efficiently: 1) recover from packet loss; 2) share bandwidth fairly with competing flows; or 3) maximize the playback quality at the client for any given client reception rate characteristics. In this work, new protocols, namely Reliable Periodic Broadcast (RPB) and Reliable Bandwidth Skimming (RBS), are developed that efficiently recover from packet loss and achieve close to the best possible server bandwidth scalability for a given set of client characteristics. To share bandwidth fairly with competing traffic such as TCP, these protocols can employ the Vegas Multicast Rate Control (VMRC) protocol proposed in this work. The VMRC protocol exhibits TCP Vegas-like behavior. In comparison to prior rate control protocols, VMRC provides less oscillatory reception rates to clients, and operates without inducing packet loss when the bottleneck link is lightly loaded. The VMRC protocol incorporates a new technique for dynamically adjusting the TCP Vegas threshold parameters based on measured characteristics of the network. This technique implements fair sharing of network resources with other types of competing flows, including widely deployed versions of TCP such as TCP Reno. This fair sharing is not possible with the previously defined static Vegas threshold parameters. The RPB protocol is extended to efficiently support quality adaptation. The Optimized Heterogeneous Periodic Broadcast (HPB) is designed to support a range of client reception rates and efficiently support static quality adaptation by allowing clients to work-ahead before beginning playback to receive a media file of the desired quality. A dynamic quality adaptation technique is developed and evaluated which allows clients to achieve more uniform playback quality given time-varying client reception rates

    Design of interface selection protocols for multi-homed wireless networks

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    The IEEE 802.11/802.16 standards conformant wireless communication stations have multi-homing transmission capability. To achieve greater communication efficiency, multi-homing capable stations use handover mechanism to select appropriate transmission channel according to variations in the channel quality. This thesis presents three internal-linked handover schemes, (1) Interface Selection Protocol (ISP), belonging to Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN)- Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX) environment (2) Fast Channel Scanning (FCS) and (3) Traffic Manager (TM), (2) and (3) belonging to WiMAX Environment. The proposed schemes in this thesis use a novel mechanism of providing a reliable communication route. This solution is based on a cross-layer communication framework, where the interface selection module uses various network related parameters from Medium Access Control (MAC) sub-layer/Physical Layer (PHY) across the protocol suite for decision making at the Network layer. The proposed solutions are highly responsive when compared with existing multi-homed schemes; responsiveness is one of the key factors in the design of such protocols. Selected route under these schemes is based on the most up to date link-layer information. Therefore, such a route is not only reliable in terms of route optimization but it also fulfils the application demands in terms of throughput and delay. Design of ISP protocol use probing frames during the route discovery process. The 802.11 mandates the use of different rates for data transmission frames. The ISP-metric can be incorporated into various routing aspects and its applicability is determined by the possibility of provision of MAC dependent parameters that are used to determine the best path metric values. In many cases, higher device density, interference and mobility cause variable medium access delays. It causes creation of ‘unreachable zones’, where destination is marked as unreachable. However, by use of the best path metric, the destination has been made reachable, anytime and anywhere, because of the intelligent use of the probing frames and interface selection algorithm implemented. The IEEE 802.16e introduces several MAC level queues for different access categories, maintaining service requirement within these queues; which imply that frames from a higher priority queue, i.e. video frames, are serviced more frequently than those belonging to lower priority queues. Such an enhancement at the MAC sub-layer introduces uneven queuing delays. Conventional routing protocols are unaware of such MAC specific constraints and as a result, these factors are not considered which result in channel performance degradation. To meet such challenges, the thesis presents FCS and TM schemes for WiMAX. For FCS, Its solution is to improve the mobile WiMAX handover and address the scanning latency. Since minimum scanning time is the most important issue in the handover process. This handover scheme aims to utilize the channel efficiently and apply such a procedure to reduce the time it takes to scan the neighboring access stations. TM uses MAC and physical layer (PHY) specific information in the interface metric and maintains a separate path to destination by applying an alternative interface operation. Simulation tests and comparisons with existing multi-homed protocols and handover schemes demonstrate the effectiveness of incorporating the medium dependent parameters. Moreover, show that suggested schemes, have shown better performance in terms of end-to-end delay and throughput, with efficiency up to 40% in specific test scenarios.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    Improving the Performance of Wireless LANs

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    This book quantifies the key factors of WLAN performance and describes methods for improvement. It provides theoretical background and empirical results for the optimum planning and deployment of indoor WLAN systems, explaining the fundamentals while supplying guidelines for design, modeling, and performance evaluation. It discusses environmental effects on WLAN systems, protocol redesign for routing and MAC, and traffic distribution; examines emerging and future network technologies; and includes radio propagation and site measurements, simulations for various network design scenarios, numerous illustrations, practical examples, and learning aids
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