1,786 research outputs found

    vSkyConf: Cloud-assisted Multi-party Mobile Video Conferencing

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    As an important application in the busy world today, mobile video conferencing facilitates virtual face-to-face communication with friends, families and colleagues, via their mobile devices on the move. However, how to provision high-quality, multi-party video conferencing experiences over mobile devices is still an open challenge. The fundamental reason behind is the lack of computation and communication capacities on the mobile devices, to scale to large conferencing sessions. In this paper, we present vSkyConf, a cloud-assisted mobile video conferencing system to fundamentally improve the quality and scale of multi-party mobile video conferencing. By novelly employing a surrogate virtual machine in the cloud for each mobile user, we allow fully scalable communication among the conference participants via their surrogates, rather than directly. The surrogates exchange conferencing streams among each other, transcode the streams to the most appropriate bit rates, and buffer the streams for the most efficient delivery to the mobile recipients. A fully decentralized, optimal algorithm is designed to decide the best paths of streams and the most suitable surrogates for video transcoding along the paths, such that the limited bandwidth is fully utilized to deliver streams of the highest possible quality to the mobile recipients. We also carefully tailor a buffering mechanism on each surrogate to cooperate with optimal stream distribution. We have implemented vSkyConf based on Amazon EC2 and verified the excellent performance of our design, as compared to the widely adopted unicast solutions.Comment: 10 page

    Transcoding of MPEG Bitstreams

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    This paper discusses the problem of transcoding as it may occur in, for instance, the following situation. Suppose a satellite transmits an MPEG-compressed video signal at say 9 Mbit/s. This signal must be relayed at a cable head end. However, since the cable capacity is only limited, the cable head end will want to relay this incoming signal at a lower bit-rate of, say, 5 Mbit/s. The problem is how to convert a compressed video signal of a given bit-rate into a compressed video signal of a lower bit-rate. The specific transcoding problem discussed in this paper is referred to as bit-rate conversion. Basically, a transcoder used for such a purpose will consist of a cascaded decoder and encoder. It is shown in the paper that the complexity of this combination can be significantly reduced. The paper also investigates the loss of picture quality that may be expected when a transcoder is in the transmission chain. The loss of quality as compared to that resulting in the case of transmission without a transcoder is studied by means of computations using simplified models of the transmission chains and by means of using computer simulations of the complete transmission chain. It will be shown that the presence of two quantizers, i.e. cascaded quantization, in the transmission chain is the main cause of extra losses, and it will be shown that the losses in terms of SNR will be some 0.5 Âż 1.0 dB greater than in the case of a transmission chain without a transcoder

    Cross-layer Optimized Wireless Video Surveillance

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    A wireless video surveillance system contains three major components, the video capture and preprocessing, the video compression and transmission over wireless sensor networks (WSNs), and the video analysis at the receiving end. The coordination of different components is important for improving the end-to-end video quality, especially under the communication resource constraint. Cross-layer control proves to be an efficient measure for optimal system configuration. In this dissertation, we address the problem of implementing cross-layer optimization in the wireless video surveillance system. The thesis work is based on three research projects. In the first project, a single PTU (pan-tilt-unit) camera is used for video object tracking. The problem studied is how to improve the quality of the received video by jointly considering the coding and transmission process. The cross-layer controller determines the optimal coding and transmission parameters, according to the dynamic channel condition and the transmission delay. Multiple error concealment strategies are developed utilizing the special property of the PTU camera motion. In the second project, the binocular PTU camera is adopted for video object tracking. The presented work studied the fast disparity estimation algorithm and the 3D video transcoding over the WSN for real-time applications. The disparity/depth information is estimated in a coarse-to-fine manner using both local and global methods. The transcoding is coordinated by the cross-layer controller based on the channel condition and the data rate constraint, in order to achieve the best view synthesis quality. The third project is applied for multi-camera motion capture in remote healthcare monitoring. The challenge is the resource allocation for multiple video sequences. The presented cross-layer design incorporates the delay sensitive, content-aware video coding and transmission, and the adaptive video coding and transmission to ensure the optimal and balanced quality for the multi-view videos. In these projects, interdisciplinary study is conducted to synergize the surveillance system under the cross-layer optimization framework. Experimental results demonstrate the efficiency of the proposed schemes. The challenges of cross-layer design in existing wireless video surveillance systems are also analyzed to enlighten the future work. Adviser: Song C
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