5 research outputs found

    A family of stereoscopic image compression algorithms using wavelet transforms

    Get PDF
    With the standardization of JPEG-2000, wavelet-based image and video compression technologies are gradually replacing the popular DCT-based methods. In parallel to this, recent developments in autostereoscopic display technology is now threatening to revolutionize the way in which consumers are used to enjoying the traditional 2D display based electronic media such as television, computer and movies. However, due to the two-fold bandwidth/storage space requirement of stereoscopic imaging, an essential requirement of a stereo imaging system is efficient data compression. In this thesis, seven wavelet-based stereo image compression algorithms are proposed, to take advantage of the higher data compaction capability and better flexibility of wavelets. In the proposed CODEC I, block-based disparity estimation/compensation (DE/DC) is performed in pixel domain. However, this results in an inefficiency when DWT is applied on the whole predictive error image that results from the DE process. This is because of the existence of artificial block boundaries between error blocks in the predictive error image. To overcome this problem, in the remaining proposed CODECs, DE/DC is performed in the wavelet domain. Due to the multiresolution nature of the wavelet domain, two methods of disparity estimation and compensation have been proposed. The first method is performing DEJDC in each subband of the lowest/coarsest resolution level and then propagating the disparity vectors obtained to the corresponding subbands of higher/finer resolution. Note that DE is not performed in every subband due to the high overhead bits that could be required for the coding of disparity vectors of all subbands. This method is being used in CODEC II. In the second method, DEJDC is performed m the wavelet-block domain. This enables disparity estimation to be performed m all subbands simultaneously without increasing the overhead bits required for the coding disparity vectors. This method is used by CODEC III. However, performing disparity estimation/compensation in all subbands would result in a significant improvement of CODEC III. To further improve the performance of CODEC ill, pioneering wavelet-block search technique is implemented in CODEC IV. The pioneering wavelet-block search technique enables the right/predicted image to be reconstructed at the decoder end without the need of transmitting the disparity vectors. In proposed CODEC V, pioneering block search is performed in all subbands of DWT decomposition which results in an improvement of its performance. Further, the CODEC IV and V are able to perform at very low bit rates(< 0.15 bpp). In CODEC VI and CODEC VII, Overlapped Block Disparity Compensation (OBDC) is used with & without the need of coding disparity vector. Our experiment results showed that no significant coding gains could be obtained for these CODECs over CODEC IV & V. All proposed CODECs m this thesis are wavelet-based stereo image coding algorithms that maximise the flexibility and benefits offered by wavelet transform technology when applied to stereo imaging. In addition the use of a baseline-JPEG coding architecture would enable the easy adaptation of the proposed algorithms within systems originally built for DCT-based coding. This is an important feature that would be useful during an era where DCT-based technology is only slowly being phased out to give way for DWT based compression technology. In addition, this thesis proposed a stereo image coding algorithm that uses JPEG-2000 technology as the basic compression engine. The proposed CODEC, named RASTER is a rate scalable stereo image CODEC that has a unique ability to preserve the image quality at binocular depth boundaries, which is an important requirement in the design of stereo image CODEC. The experimental results have shown that the proposed CODEC is able to achieve PSNR gains of up to 3.7 dB as compared to directly transmitting the right frame using JPEG-2000

    A family of stereoscopic image compression algorithms using wavelet transforms

    Get PDF
    With the standardization of JPEG-2000, wavelet-based image and video compression technologies are gradually replacing the popular DCT-based methods. In parallel to this, recent developments in autostereoscopic display technology is now threatening to revolutionize the way in which consumers are used to enjoying the traditional 2-D display based electronic media such as television, computer and movies. However, due to the two-fold bandwidth/storage space requirement of stereoscopic imaging, an essential requirement of a stereo imaging system is efficient data compression. In this thesis, seven wavelet-based stereo image compression algorithms are proposed, to take advantage of the higher data compaction capability and better flexibility of wavelets. [Continues.

    Codage d'images avec et sans pertes à basse complexité et basé contenu

    Get PDF
    This doctoral research project aims at designing an improved solution of the still image codec called LAR (Locally Adaptive Resolution) for both compression performance and complexity. Several image compression standards have been well proposed and used in the multimedia applications, but the research does not stop the progress for the higher coding quality and/or lower coding consumption. JPEG was standardized twenty years ago, while it is still a widely used compression format today. With a better coding efficiency, the application of the JPEG 2000 is limited by its larger computation cost than the JPEG one. In 2008, the JPEG Committee announced a Call for Advanced Image Coding (AIC). This call aims to standardize potential technologies going beyond existing JPEG standards. The LAR codec was proposed as one response to this call. The LAR framework tends to associate the compression efficiency and the content-based representation. It supports both lossy and lossless coding under the same structure. However, at the beginning of this study, the LAR codec did not implement the rate-distortion-optimization (RDO). This shortage was detrimental for LAR during the AIC evaluation step. Thus, in this work, it is first to characterize the impact of the main parameters of the codec on the compression efficiency, next to construct the RDO models to configure parameters of LAR for achieving optimal or sub-optimal coding efficiencies. Further, based on the RDO models, a “quality constraint” method is introduced to encode the image at a given target MSE/PSNR. The accuracy of the proposed technique, estimated by the ratio between the error variance and the setpoint, is about 10%. Besides, the subjective quality measurement is taken into consideration and the RDO models are locally applied in the image rather than globally. The perceptual quality is improved with a significant gain measured by the objective quality metric SSIM (structural similarity). Aiming at a low complexity and efficient image codec, a new coding scheme is also proposed in lossless mode under the LAR framework. In this context, all the coding steps are changed for a better final compression ratio. A new classification module is also introduced to decrease the entropy of the prediction errors. Experiments show that this lossless codec achieves the equivalent compression ratio to JPEG 2000, while saving 76% of the time consumption in average in encoding and decoding.Ce projet de recherche doctoral vise à proposer solution améliorée du codec de codage d’images LAR (Locally Adaptive Resolution), à la fois d’un point de vue performances de compression et complexité. Plusieurs standards de compression d’images ont été proposés par le passé et mis à profit dans de nombreuses applications multimédia, mais la recherche continue dans ce domaine afin d’offrir de plus grande qualité de codage et/ou de plus faibles complexité de traitements. JPEG fut standardisé il y a vingt ans, et il continue pourtant à être le format de compression le plus utilisé actuellement. Bien qu’avec de meilleures performances de compression, l’utilisation de JPEG 2000 reste limitée due à sa complexité plus importe comparée à JPEG. En 2008, le comité de standardisation JPEG a lancé un appel à proposition appelé AIC (Advanced Image Coding). L’objectif était de pouvoir standardiser de nouvelles technologies allant au-delà des standards existants. Le codec LAR fut alors proposé comme réponse à cet appel. Le système LAR tend à associer une efficacité de compression et une représentation basée contenu. Il supporte le codage avec et sans pertes avec la même structure. Cependant, au début de cette étude, le codec LAR ne mettait pas en oeuvre de techniques d’optimisation débit/distorsions (RDO), ce qui lui fut préjudiciable lors de la phase d’évaluation d’AIC. Ainsi dans ce travail, il s’agit dans un premier temps de caractériser l’impact des principaux paramètres du codec sur l’efficacité de compression, sur la caractérisation des relations existantes entre efficacité de codage, puis de construire des modèles RDO pour la configuration des paramètres afin d’obtenir une efficacité de codage proche de l’optimal. De plus, basée sur ces modèles RDO, une méthode de « contrôle de qualité » est introduite qui permet de coder une image à une cible MSE/PSNR donnée. La précision de la technique proposée, estimée par le rapport entre la variance de l’erreur et la consigne, est d’environ 10%. En supplément, la mesure de qualité subjective est prise en considération et les modèles RDO sont appliqués localement dans l’image et non plus globalement. La qualité perceptuelle est visiblement améliorée, avec un gain significatif mesuré par la métrique de qualité objective SSIM. Avec un double objectif d’efficacité de codage et de basse complexité, un nouveau schéma de codage LAR est également proposé dans le mode sans perte. Dans ce contexte, toutes les étapes de codage sont modifiées pour un meilleur taux de compression final. Un nouveau module de classification est également introduit pour diminuer l’entropie des erreurs de prédiction. Les expérimentations montrent que ce codec sans perte atteint des taux de compression équivalents à ceux de JPEG 2000, tout en économisant 76% du temps de codage et de décodage

    Quadtree-Guided Wavelet Image Coding

    No full text
    A hybrid of wavelet and quadtree image coding is introduced. It uses a recently developed quadtree predictive coding technique, having good rate/fidelity performance and very low complexity, to encode the baseband wavelet coefficients. The resulting quadtree decomposition of the baseband is then used to guide the encoding of higher frequency subbands, by indicating which of their coefficients require encoding and which do not. The result is a coding method with performance comparable to those of the best known wavelet coders, but with less complexity. I. Introduction Subband image coders based on discrete wavelet transforms have produced some of the best, if not the best, image coding results (c.f. [1-7]) in the sense of good rate vs. fidelity characteristics (both PSNR and perceptual) with reasonable complexity. Aside from producing good subband decompositions, recent wavelet coders have also benefited substantially from clever ways of exploiting the similarity of subband images at o..

    Hierarchical data compression.

    Full text link
    Data compression is the process of reducing the number of bits in a representation of some data. Since the advent of digital techniques for storage and transmission, data compression has received a great deal of attention. In this dissertation, three low complexity, high performance, hierarchical data compression algorithms are proposed. Two are image compression algorithms and one is a text compression algorithm. The first algorithm, called quadtree predictive image coding (QPC), is a hybrid of quadtree coding and DPCM. The overall effect of this algorithm is to segment an image into blocks of various sizes, and to represent each by a variable-length coded quantization index. Though this algorithm has very low complexity (approximately 15 encoding operations, 4 decoding operations, and almost no multiplications/divisions are required per pixel), its rate/distortion performance is significantly better than JPEG and other quadtree based image coders. For example, at rate 0.17 on the test image lena, its signal-to-noise ratio is 3.2 dB better than JPEG. Also, its predictive nature suppresses blocking artifacts. The second algorithm, called quadtree-guided wavelet image coding, is a hybrid of wavelet and quadtree image coding. It first decomposes an image into baseband and outerbands and then uses QPC to encode the baseband wavelet coefficients. The resulting quadtree segmented baseband is then used to guide the encoding of outerbands. Though a wavelet decomposition must be performed, the method is not much more complex than QPC, because only a one- or two-scale decomposition is needed, the quadtree method is applied only to baseband, and simple methods are used to encode the remaining subbands. The result is a coding method with performance comparable to that of the best known image coders, but with less complexity. The third algorithm is an improve N-gram algorithm for text compression. The N-gram algorithm as a hierarchical method invented by Bugajski and Russo for losslessly compressing data. Based on this method, several improvements are proposed. When applied to English text these result in an algorithm with comparable complexity and approximately 10 to 30% less rate than the commonly used COMPRESS algorithm.Ph.D.Applied SciencesComputer scienceElectrical engineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/130137/2/9712100.pd
    corecore