3 research outputs found

    Low complexity video compression using moving edge detection based on DCT coefficients

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    In this paper, we propose a new low complexity video compression method based on detecting blocks containing moving edges us- ing only DCT coe±cients. The detection, whilst being very e±cient, also allows e±cient motion estimation by constraining the search process to moving macro-blocks only. The encoders PSNR is degraded by 2dB com- pared to H.264/AVC inter for such scenarios, whilst requiring only 5% of the execution time. The computational complexity of our approach is comparable to that of the DISCOVER codec which is the state of the art low complexity distributed video coding. The proposed method ¯nds blocks with moving edge blocks and processes only selected blocks. The approach is particularly suited to surveillance type scenarios with a static camera

    A Review on Design of Low Bit Rate Video Encoding for Image Compression

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    In this paper, we propose a new low complexity video compression method based on detecting blocks containing moving edges using only DCT coefficients. The detection, whilst being very efficient, also allows efficient motion estimation by constraining the search process to moving macro-blocks only. It takes advantage of the prior knowledge of the image type to segment the image into different regions, then codes each region with differentcodingcriterion and method according to the different importance. An adaptive region-classified vector quantization strategy is also exploited in this algorithm. Canny method is adopted to detect the edges of the encoded image. These edges arereplaced with a pre-designed nine basis nameplates. Then,the Macro edge detection technique is used to reduce the number of these nameplates and keep only the edges that are necessary for visual quality

    A cross-layer quality-oriented energy-efficient scheme for multimedia delivery in wireless local area networks

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    Wireless communication technologies, although emerged only a few decades ago, have grown fast in both popularity and technical maturity. As a result, mobile devices such as Personal Digital Assistants (PDA) or smart phones equipped with embedded wireless cards have seen remarkable growth in popularity and are quickly becoming one of the most widely used communication tools. This is mainly determined by the flexibility, convenience and relatively low costs associated with these devices and wireless communications. Multimedia applications have become by far one of the most popular applications among mobile users. However this type of application has very high bandwidth requirements, seriously restricting the usage of portable devices. Moreover, the wireless technology involves increased energy consumption and consequently puts huge pressure on the limited battery capacity which presents many design challenges in the context of battery powered devices. As a consequence, power management has raised awareness in both research and industrial communities and huge efforts have been invested into energy conservation techniques and strategies deployed within different components of the mobile devices. Our research presented in this thesis focuses on energy efficient data transmission in wireless local networks, and mainly contributes in the following aspects: 1. Static STELA, which is a Medium Access Control (MAC) layer solution that adapts the sleep/wakeup state schedule of the radio transceiver according to the bursty nature of data traffic and real time observation of data packets in terms of arrival time. The algorithm involves three phases– slow start phase, exponential increase phase, and linear increase phase. The initiation and termination of each phase is self-adapted to real time traffic and user configuration. It is designed to provide either maximum energy efficiency or best Quality of Service (QoS) according to user preference. 2. Dynamic STELA, which is a MAC layer solution deployed on the mobile devices and provides balanced performance between energy efficiency and QoS. Dynamic STELA consists of the three phase algorithm used in static STELA, and additionally employs a traffic modeling algorithm to analyze historical traffic data and estimate the arrival time of the next burst. Dynamic STELA achieves energy saving through intelligent and adaptive increase of Wireless Network Interface Card (WNIC) sleeping interval in the second and the third phase and at the same time guarantees delivery performance through optimal WNIC waking timing before the estimated arrival of new data burst. 3. Q-PASTE, which is a quality-oriented cross-layer solution with two components employed at different network layers, designed for multimedia content delivery. First component, the Packet/ApplicaTion manager (PAT) is deployed at the application layer of both service gateway and client host. The gateway level PAT utilizes fast start, as a widely supported technique for multimedia content delivery, to achieve high QoS and shapes traffic into bursts to reduce the wireless transceiver’s duty cycle. Additionally, gateway-side PAT informs client host the starting and ending time of fast start to assist parameter tuning. The client-side PAT monitors each active session and informs the MAC layer about their traffic-related behavior. The second component, dynamic STELA, deployed at MAC layer, adaptively adjusts the sleep/wake-up behavior of mobile device wireless interfaces in order to reduce energy consumption while also maintaining high Quality of Service (QoS) levels. 4. A comprehensive survey on energy efficient standards and some of the most important state-of-the-art energy saving technologies is also provided as part of the work
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