667 research outputs found
Quality of Experience and Adaptation Techniques for Multimedia Communications
The widespread use of multimedia services on the World Wide Web and the advances
in end-user portable devices have recently increased the user demands for better quality.
Moreover, providing these services seamlessly and ubiquitously on wireless networks and
with user mobility poses hard challenges. To meet these challenges and fulfill the end-user
requirements, suitable strategies need to be adopted at both application level and network
level. At the application level rate and quality have to be adapted to time-varying bandwidth
limitations, whereas on the network side a mechanism for efficient use of the network
resources has to be implemented, to provide a better end-user Quality of Experience (QoE)
through better Quality of Service (QoS). The work in this thesis addresses these issues by
first investigating multi-stream rate adaptation techniques for Scalable Video Coding (SVC)
applications aimed at a fair provision of QoE to end-users. Rate Distortion (R-D) models
for real-time and non real-time video streaming have been proposed and a rate adaptation
technique is also developed to minimize with fairness the distortion of multiple videos
with difference complexities. To provide resiliency against errors, the effect of Unequal
Error protection (UXP) based on Reed Solomon (RS) encoding with erasure correction has
been also included in the proposed R-D modelling. Moreover, to improve the support of
QoE at the network level for multimedia applications sensitive to delays, jitters and packet
drops, a technique to prioritise different traffic flows using specific QoS classes within an
intermediate DiffServ network integrated with a WiMAX access system is investigated.
Simulations were performed to test the network under different congestion scenarios
Efficient Support for Application-Specific Video Adaptation
As video applications become more diverse, video must be adapted in different ways to meet the requirements of different applications when there are insufficient resources. In this dissertation, we address two sorts of requirements that cannot be addressed by existing video adaptation technologies: (i) accommodating large variations in resolution and (ii) collecting video effectively in a multi-hop sensor network. In addition, we also address requirements for implementing video adaptation in a sensor network.
Accommodating large variation in resolution is required by the existence of display devices with widely disparate screen sizes. Existing resolution adaptation technologies usually aim at adapting video between two resolutions. We examine the limitations of these technologies that prevent them from supporting a large number of resolutions efficiently. We propose several hybrid schemes and study their performance. Among these hybrid schemes, Bonneville, a framework that combines multiple encodings with limited scalability, can make good trade-offs when organizing compressed video to support a wide range of resolutions.
Video collection in a sensor network requires adapting video in a multi-hop storeand- forward network and with multiple video sources. This task cannot be supported effectively by existing adaptation technologies, which are designed for real-time streaming applications from a single source over IP-style end-to-end connections. We propose to adapt video in the network instead of at the network edge. We also propose a framework, Steens, to compose adaptation mechanisms on multiple nodes. We design two signaling protocols in Steens to coordinate multiple nodes. Our simulations show that in-network adaptation can use buffer space on intermediate nodes for adaptation and achieve better video quality than conventional network-edge adaptation. Our simulations also show that explicit collaboration among multiple nodes through signaling can improve video quality, waste less bandwidth, and maintain bandwidth-sharing fairness.
The implementation of video adaptation in a sensor network requires system support for programmability, retaskability, and high performance. We propose Cascades, a component-based framework, to provide the required support. A prototype implementation of Steens in this framework shows that the performance overhead is less than 5% compared to a hard-coded C implementation
A Study on the Usage of Cross-Layer Power Control and Forward Error Correction for Embedded Video Transmission over Wireless Links
Cross-layering is a design paradigm for overcoming the limitations deriving from the ISO/OSI layering principle, thus improving the performance of communications in specific scenarios, such as wireless multimedia communications. However, most available solutions are based on empirical considerations, and do not provide a theoretical background supporting such approaches. The paper aims at providing an analytical framework for the study of single-hop video delivery over a wireless link, enabling cross-layer interactions for performance optimization using power control and FEC and providing a useful tool to determine the potential gain deriving from the employment of such design paradigm. The analysis is performed using rate-distortion information of an embedded video bitstream jointly with a Lagrangian power minimization approach. Simulation results underline that cross-layering can provide relevant improvement in specific environments and that the proposed approach is able to capitalize on the advantage deriving from its deployment
Efficient and Effective Schemes for Streaming Media Delivery
The rapid expansion of the Internet and the increasingly wide deployment of wireless networks provide opportunities to deliver streaming media content to users at anywhere, anytime. To ensure good user experience, it is important to battle adversary effects, such as delay, loss and jitter. In this thesis, we first study efficient loss recovery schemes, which require pure XOR operations. In particular, we propose a novel scheme capable of recovering up to 3 packet losses, and it has the lowest complexity among all known schemes. We also propose an efficient algorithm for array codes decoding, which achieves significant throughput gain and energy savings over conventional codes. We believe these schemes are applicable to streaming applications, especially in wireless environments. We then study quality adaptation schemes for client buffer management. Our control-theoretic approach results in an efficient online rate control algorithm with analytically tractable performance. Extensive experimental results show that three goals are achieved: fast startup, continuous playback in the face of severe congestion, and maximal quality and smoothness over the entire streaming session. The scheme is later extended to streaming with limited quality levels, which is then directly applicable to existing systems
Content-Aware Multimedia Communications
The demands for fast, economic and reliable dissemination of multimedia
information are steadily growing within our society. While people and
economy increasingly rely on communication technologies, engineers still
struggle with their growing complexity.
Complexity in multimedia communication originates from several sources. The
most prominent is the unreliability of packet networks like the Internet.
Recent advances in scheduling and error control mechanisms for streaming
protocols have shown that the quality and robustness of multimedia delivery
can be improved significantly when protocols are aware of the content they
deliver. However, the proposed mechanisms require close cooperation between
transport systems and application layers which increases the overall system
complexity. Current approaches also require expensive metrics and focus on
special encoding formats only. A general and efficient model is missing so
far.
This thesis presents efficient and format-independent solutions to support
cross-layer coordination in system architectures. In particular, the first
contribution of this work is a generic dependency model that enables
transport layers to access content-specific properties of media streams,
such as dependencies between data units and their importance. The second
contribution is the design of a programming model for streaming
communication and its implementation as a middleware architecture. The
programming model hides the complexity of protocol stacks behind simple
programming abstractions, but exposes cross-layer control and monitoring
options to application programmers. For example, our interfaces allow
programmers to choose appropriate failure semantics at design time while
they can refine error protection and visibility of low-level errors at
run-time.
Based on some examples we show how our middleware simplifies the
integration of stream-based communication into large-scale application
architectures. An important result of this work is that despite cross-layer
cooperation, neither application nor transport protocol designers
experience an increase in complexity. Application programmers can even
reuse existing streaming protocols which effectively increases system
robustness.Der Bedarf unsere Gesellschaft nach kostengünstiger und
zuverlässiger
Kommunikation wächst stetig. Während wir uns selbst immer mehr von modernen
Kommunikationstechnologien abhängig machen, müssen die Ingenieure dieser
Technologien sowohl den Bedarf nach schneller Einführung neuer Produkte
befriedigen als auch die wachsende Komplexität der Systeme beherrschen.
Gerade die Übertragung multimedialer Inhalte wie Video und Audiodaten ist
nicht trivial. Einer der prominentesten Gründe dafür ist die
Unzuverlässigkeit heutiger Netzwerke, wie z.B.~dem Internet. Paketverluste
und schwankende Laufzeiten können die Darstellungsqualität massiv
beeinträchtigen. Wie jüngste Entwicklungen im Bereich der
Streaming-Protokolle zeigen, sind jedoch Qualität und Robustheit der
Übertragung effizient kontrollierbar, wenn Streamingprotokolle
Informationen über den Inhalt der transportierten Daten ausnutzen.
Existierende Ansätze, die den Inhalt von Multimediadatenströmen
beschreiben, sind allerdings meist auf einzelne Kompressionsverfahren
spezialisiert und verwenden berechnungsintensive Metriken. Das reduziert
ihren praktischen Nutzen deutlich. Außerdem erfordert der
Informationsaustausch eine enge Kooperation zwischen Applikationen und
Transportschichten. Da allerdings die Schnittstellen aktueller
Systemarchitekturen nicht darauf vorbereitet sind, müssen entweder die
Schnittstellen erweitert oder alternative Architekturkonzepte geschaffen
werden. Die Gefahr beider Varianten ist jedoch, dass sich die Komplexität
eines Systems dadurch weiter erhöhen kann.
Das zentrale Ziel dieser Dissertation ist es deshalb,
schichtenübergreifende Koordination bei gleichzeitiger Reduzierung der
Komplexität zu erreichen. Hier leistet die Arbeit zwei Beträge zum
aktuellen Stand der Forschung. Erstens definiert sie ein universelles
Modell zur Beschreibung von Inhaltsattributen, wie Wichtigkeiten und
Abhängigkeitsbeziehungen innerhalb eines Datenstroms. Transportschichten
können dieses Wissen zur effizienten Fehlerkontrolle verwenden. Zweitens
beschreibt die Arbeit das Noja Programmiermodell für multimediale
Middleware. Noja definiert Abstraktionen zur Übertragung und Kontrolle
multimedialer Ströme, die die Koordination von Streamingprotokollen mit
Applikationen ermöglichen. Zum Beispiel können Programmierer geeignete
Fehlersemantiken und Kommunikationstopologien auswählen und den konkreten
Fehlerschutz dann zur Laufzeit verfeinern und kontrolliere
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