1,570 research outputs found

    Layer-Aware Forward Error Correction for Mobile Broadcast of Layered Media

    Full text link
    The bitstream structure of layered media formats such as scalable video coding (SVC) or multiview video coding (MVC) opens up new opportunities for their distribution in Mobile TV services. Features like graceful degradation or the support of the 3-D experience in a backwards-compatible way are enabled. The reason is that parts of the media stream are more important than others with each part itself providing a useful media representation. Typically, the decoding of some parts of the bitstream is only possible, if the corresponding more important parts are correctly received. Hence, unequal error protection (UEP) can be applied protecting important parts of the bitstream more strongly than others. Mobile broadcast systems typically apply forward error correction (FEC) on upper layers to cope with transmission errors, which the physical layer FEC cannot correct. Today's FEC solutions are optimized to transmit single layer video. The exploitation of the dependencies in layered media codecs for UEP using FEC is the subject of this paper. The presented scheme, which is called layer-aware FEC (LA-FEC), incorporates the dependencies of the layered video codec into the FEC code construction. A combinatorial analysis is derived to show the potential theoretical gain in terms of FEC decoding probability and video quality. Furthermore, the implementation of LA-FEC as an extension of the Raptor FEC and the related signaling are described. The performance of layer-aware Raptor code with SVC is shown by experimental results in a DVB-H environment showing significant improvements achieved by LA-FEC. © 2011 IEEE.Hellge, C.; Gómez Barquero, D.; Schierl, T.; Wiegand, T. (2011). Layer-Aware Forward Error Correction for Mobile Broadcast of Layered Media. IEEE Transactions on Multimedia. 13(3):551-562. doi:10.1109/TMM.2011.2129499S55156213

    Network coding meets multimedia: a review

    Get PDF
    While every network node only relays messages in a traditional communication system, the recent network coding (NC) paradigm proposes to implement simple in-network processing with packet combinations in the nodes. NC extends the concept of "encoding" a message beyond source coding (for compression) and channel coding (for protection against errors and losses). It has been shown to increase network throughput compared to traditional networks implementation, to reduce delay and to provide robustness to transmission errors and network dynamics. These features are so appealing for multimedia applications that they have spurred a large research effort towards the development of multimedia-specific NC techniques. This paper reviews the recent work in NC for multimedia applications and focuses on the techniques that fill the gap between NC theory and practical applications. It outlines the benefits of NC and presents the open challenges in this area. The paper initially focuses on multimedia-specific aspects of network coding, in particular delay, in-network error control, and mediaspecific error control. These aspects permit to handle varying network conditions as well as client heterogeneity, which are critical to the design and deployment of multimedia systems. After introducing these general concepts, the paper reviews in detail two applications that lend themselves naturally to NC via the cooperation and broadcast models, namely peer-to-peer multimedia streaming and wireless networkin

    Finite Length Analysis of Rateless Codes and Their Application in Wireless Networks

    Get PDF
    Mobile communication systems are undergoing revolutionary developments as a result of the rapidly growing demands for high data rates and reliable communication connections. The key features of the next-generation mobile communication systems are provision of high-speed and robust communication links. However, wireless communications still need to address the same challenge–unreliable communication connections, arising from a number of causes including noise, interference, and distortion because of hardware imperfections or physical limitations. Forwarding error correction (FEC) codes are used to protect source information by adding redundancy. With FEC codes, errors among the transmitted message can be corrected by the receiver. Recent work has shown that, by applying rateless codes (a class of FEC codes), wireless transmission efficiency and reliability can be dramatically improved. Unlike traditional codes, rateless codes can adapt to different channel conditions. Rateless codes have been widely used in many multimedia broadcast/multicast applications. Among the known rate- less codes, two types of codes stand out: Luby transform (LT) codes and Raptor codes. However, our understanding of LT codes and Raptor codes is still in- complete due to the lack of complete theoretical analysis on the decoding error performance of these codes. Particularly, this thesis focuses on the decoding error performance of these codes under maximum-likelihood (ML) decoding, which provides a benchmark on the optimum system performance for gauging other decoding schemes. In this thesis, we discuss the effectiveness of rateless codes in terms of the success probability of decoding. It is defined as the probability that all source symbols can be successfully decoded with a given number of success- fully received coded symbols under ML decoding. This thesis provides a detailed mathematical analysis on the rank profile of general LT codes to evaluate the decoding success probability of LT codes under ML decoding. Furthermore, by analyzing the rank of the product of two random coefficient matrices, this thesis derived bounds on the decoding success probability of Raptor codes with a systematic low-density generator matrix (LDGM) code as the pre-code under ML decoding. Additionally, by resorting to stochastic geometry analysis, we develop a rateless codes based broadcast scheme. This scheme allows a base station (BS) to broadcast a given number of symbols to a large number of users, without user acknowledgment, while being able to pro- vide a performance guarantee on the probability of successful delivery. Further, the BS has limited statistical information about the environment including the spatial distribution of users (instead of their exact locations and number) and the wireless propagation model. Based on the analysis of finite length LT codes and Raptor codes, an upper and a lower bound on the number of transmissions required to meet the performance requirement are obtained. The technique and analysis developed in this thesis are useful for designing efficient and reliable wireless broadcast strategies. It is of interest to implement rateless codes into modern communication systems

    SoftCast

    Get PDF
    The focus of this demonstration is the performance of streaming video over the mobile wireless channel. We compare two schemes: the standard approach to video which transmits H.264/AVC-encoded stream over 802.11-like PHY, and SoftCast -- a clean-slate design for wireless video where the source transmits one video stream that each receiver decodes to a video quality commensurate with its specific instantaneous channel quality

    SoftCast: Clean-slate Scalable Wireless Video

    Get PDF
    Video broadcast and mobile video challenge the conventional wireless design. In broadcast and mobile scenarios the bit rate supported by the channel differs across receivers and varies quickly over time. The conventional design however forces the source to pick a single bit rate and degrades sharply when the channel cannot not support the chosen bit rate. This paper presents SoftCast, a clean-slate design for wireless video where the source transmits one video stream that each receiver decodes to a video quality commensurate with its specific instantaneous channel quality. To do so, SoftCast ensures the samples of the digital video signal transmitted on the channel are linearly related to the pixels' luminance. Thus, when channel noise perturbs the transmitted signal samples, the perturbation naturally translates into approximation in the original video pixels. Hence, a receiver with a good channel (low noise) obtains a high fidelity video, and a receiver with a bad channel (high noise) obtains a low fidelity video. We implement SoftCast using the GNURadio software and the USRP platform. Results from a 20-node testbed show that SoftCast improves the average video quality (i.e., PSNR) across broadcast receivers in our testbed by up to 5.5dB. Even for a single receiver, it eliminates video glitches caused by mobility and increases robustness to packet loss by an order of magnitude

    COST EFFICIENT PROVISIONING OF MASS MOBILE MULTIMEDIA SERVICES IN HYBRID CELLULAR AND BROADCASTING SYSTEMS

    Full text link
    Uno de los retos a los que se enfrenta la industria de las comunicaciones móviles e inalámbricas es proporcionar servicios multimedia masivos a bajo coste, haciéndolos asequibles para los usuarios y rentables a los operadores. El servicio más representativo es el de TV móvil, el cual se espera que sea una aplicación clave en las futuras redes móviles. Actualmente las redes celulares no pueden soportar un consumo a gran escala de este tipo de servicios, y las nuevas redes de radiodifusión móvil son muy costosas de desplegar debido a la gran inversión en infraestructura de red necesaria para proporcionar niveles aceptables de cobertura. Esta tesis doctoral aborda el problema de la provisión eficiente de servicios multimedia masivos a dispositivos móviles y portables utilizando la infraestructura de radiodifusión y celular existente. La tesis contempla las tecnologías comerciales de última generación para la radiodifusión móvil (DVB-H) y para las redes celulares (redes 3G+ con HSDPA y MBMS), aunque se centra principalmente en DVB-H. El principal paradigma propuesto para proporcionar servicios multimedia masivos a bajo coste es evitar el despliegue de una red DVB-H con alta capacidad y cobertura desde el inicio. En su lugar se propone realizar un despliegue progresivo de la infraestructura DVB-H siguiendo la demanda de los usuarios. Bajo este contexto, la red celular es fundamental para evitar sobre-dimensionar la red DVB-H en capacidad y también en áreas con una baja densidad de usuarios hasta que el despliegue de un transmisor o un repetidor DVB-H sea necesario. Como principal solución tecnológica la tesis propone realizar una codificación multi-burst en DVB-H utilizando códigos Raptor. El objetivo es explotar la diversidad temporal del canal móvil para aumentar la robustez de la señal y, por tanto, el nivel de cobertura, a costa de incrementar la latencia de la red.Gómez Barquero, D. (2009). COST EFFICIENT PROVISIONING OF MASS MOBILE MULTIMEDIA SERVICES IN HYBRID CELLULAR AND BROADCASTING SYSTEMS [Tesis doctoral no publicada]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/6881Palanci
    corecore