2,884 research outputs found

    Estimation of signal distortion using effective sampling density for light field-based free viewpoint video

    Get PDF
    In a light field-based free viewpoint video (LF-based FVV) system, effective sampling density (ESD) is defined as the number of rays per unit area of the scene that has been acquired and is selected in the rendering process for reconstructing an unknown ray. This paper extends the concept of ESD and shows that ESD is a tractable metric that quantifies the joint impact of the imperfections of LF acquisition and rendering. By deriving and analyzing ESD for the commonly used LF acquisition and rendering methods, it is shown that ESD is an effective indicator determined by system parameters and can be used to directly estimate output video distortion without access to the ground truth. This claim is verified by extensive numerical simulations and comparison to PSNR. Furthermore, an empirical relationship between the output distortion (in PSNR) and the calculated ESD is established to allow direct assessment of the overall video distortion without an actual implementation of the system. A small scale subjective user study is also conducted which indicates a correlation of 0.91 between ESD and perceived quality

    Performance improvement of segmentation-based depth representation in 3D imagery by region merging

    Get PDF
    The feasible implementation of immersive 3D video systems entails the need for a substantial reduction in the amount of image information necessary for representation. Multiview image rendering algorithms based on depth data have radically reduced the number of images required to reconstruct a 3D scene. Nonetheless, the compression of depth maps still poses several challenges due to the particular nature and characteristics of the data. To this end, this paper outlines a depth representation technique, developed in our earlier work, that exploits the correlation intrinsically present between color intensity and depth images capturing a natural scene. In this technique, a segmentation-based algorithm that is backwards compatible with conventional video coding systems is implemented. The effectiveness of our previous technique is enhanced in this contribution by a region merging process on the segmented regions, which results in a decrease in the amount of information necessary for transmission or storage of multiview image data by a factor of 20.5 with respect to the reference H.264/AVC coding methodology. This is furthermore achieved whilst maintaining a 3D image reconstruction and viewing quality which is quasi identical to the referenced approach.peer-reviewe
    • …
    corecore