158 research outputs found

    Efficient Algorithms to Enhance Recovery Schema in Link State Protocols

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    With the increasing demands for real-time applications traffic in net- works such as video and voice a high convergence time for the existing routing protocols when failure occurred is required. These applications can be very sensitive to packet loss when link/node goes down. In this paper, we propose two algorithms schemas for the link state protocol to reroute the traffic in two states; first, pre-calculated an alternative and disjoint path with the primary one from the source to the destination by re-routing traffic through it, regardless of the locations of failure and the number of failed links. Second, rerouting the traffic via an alternative path from a node whose local link is down without the need to wait until the source node knows about the failure. This is achieved by creating a new backup routing table based on the original routing table which is computed by the dijkstra algorithm. The goal of these algorithms is to reduce loss of packets, end-to-end delay time, improve throughput and avoiding local loop when nodes re-converge the topology in case of failure.Comment: 15 page

    Intra Coding Strategy for Video Error Resiliency: Behavioral Analysis

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    One challenge in video transmission is to deal with packet loss. Since the compressed video streams are sensitive to data loss, the error resiliency of the encoded video becomes important. When video data is lost and retransmission is not possible, the missed data should be concealed. But loss concealment causes distortion in the lossy frame which also propagates into the next frames even if their data are received correctly. One promising solution to mitigate this error propagation is intra coding. There are three approaches for intra coding: intra coding of a number of blocks selected randomly or regularly, intra coding of some specific blocks selected by an appropriate cost function, or intra coding of a whole frame. But Intra coding reduces the compression ratio; therefore, there exists a trade-off between bitrate and error resiliency achieved by intra coding. In this paper, we study and show the best strategy for getting the best rate-distortion performance. Considering the error propagation, an objective function is formulated, and with some approximations, this objective function is simplified and solved. The solution demonstrates that periodical I-frame coding is preferred over coding only a number of blocks as intra mode in P-frames. Through examination of various test sequences, it is shown that the best intra frame period depends on the coding bitrate as well as the packet loss rate. We then propose a scheme to estimate this period from curve fitting of the experimental results, and show that our proposed scheme outperforms other methods of intra coding especially for higher loss rates and coding bitrates

    PRAM: Penalized Resource Allocation Method for Video Services

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    The human visual system response to picture quality degradation due to packet loss is very different from the responses of objective quality measures. While video quality due to packet loss may be impaired by at most for one Group of Pictures (GOP), its subjective quality degradation may last for several GOPs. This has a great impact on resource allocation strategies, which normally make decisions on instantaneous conditions of multiplexing buffer. This is because, when the perceptual impact of degraded video quality is much longer than its objective degradation period, any assigned resources to the degraded flow is wasted. This paper, through both simulations and analysis shows that, during resource allocation, if the quality of a video stream is significantly degraded, it is better to penalize this degraded flow from getting its full bandwidth share and instead assign the remaining share to other flows preventing them from undergoing quality degradation

    Intra-Refresh Provision for WiMAX Data-Partitioned Video Streaming

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    Mobile, broadband wireless access is increasingly being used for video streaming. This paper is a study of the impact of intra-refresh provision upon a robust video streaming scheme intended for WiMAX. The paper demonstrates the use of intra-refresh macroblocks within inter-coded video frames as an alternative to periodic intra-refresh video frames. In fact, the proposed scheme combines intra-refresh macroblocks with data-partitioned video compression, both error resilience tools from the H.264 video codec. Redundant video packets along with adaptive channel coding are also used to protect video streams. In harsh wireless channel conditions, it is found that all the proposed measures are necessary. This is because error bursts, arising from both slow and fast fading, as well as other channel impairments, are possible. The main conclusions from a detailed analysis are that: because of the effect on packet size it is important to select a moderate quantization parameter; and because of the higher overhead from cyclic intra macroblock line update it is better to select a low percentage per frame of intra-refresh macroblocks. The proposed video streaming scheme will be applicable to other 4G wireless technologies such as LTE

    Protecting H.264/AVC Data-Partitioned Video Streams over Broadband WiMAX

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    Broadband wireless technology, though aimed at video services, also poses a potential threat to video services, as wireless channels are prone to error bursts. In this paper, an adaptive, application-layer Forward Error Correction (FEC) scheme protects H.264/AVC data-partitioned video. Data partitioning is the division of a compressed video stream into partitions of differing decoding importance. The paper determines whether equal error protection (EEP) through FEC of all partition types or unequal error protection (UEP) of the more important partition type is preferable. The paper finds that, though UEP offers a small reduction in bitrate, if EEP is employed, there are significant gains (several dBs) in video quality. Overhead from using EEP rather than UEP was found to be around 1% of the overall bitrate. Given that data partitioning already reduces errors through packet size reduction and differentiation of coding data, EEP with data partitioning is a practical means of protecting user-based video streaming. The gain from employing EEP is shown to be higher quality video to the user, which will result in a greater take-up of video services. The results have implications for other forms of prioritized video streaming

    Localized Multistreams for P2P Streaming

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    Streaming video over the Internet, including cellular networks, has now become a commonplace. Network operators typically use multicasting or variants of multiple unicasting to deliver streams to the user terminal in a controlled fashion. P2P streaming is an emerging alternative, which is theoretically more scalable but suffers from other issues arising from the dynamic nature of the system. Users' terminals become streaming nodes but they are not constantly connected. Another issue is that they are based on logical overlays, which are not optimized for the physical underlay infrastructure. An important proposition is to find effective ways to increase the resilience of the overlay whilst at the same time not conflicting with the network. In this article we look at the combination of two techniques, redundant streaming and locality awareness, in the context of both live and video-on-demand streaming. We introduce a new technique and assess it via a comparative, simulation-based study. We find that redundancy affects network utilization only marginally if traffic is kept at the edges via localization techniques

    Quality evaluation of holographic images coded with standard codecs

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    Recently, more interest in the different plenoptic formats, including digital holograms, has emerged. Aside from other challenges that several steps of the holographic pipeline, from digital acquisition to display, have to face, visual quality assessment of compressed holograms is particularly demanding due to the distinct nature of this 3D image modality when compared to regular 2D imaging. There are few studies on holographic data quality assessment, particularly with respect to the perceptual effects of lossy compression. This work aims to study the quality evaluation of digital hologram reconstructions presented on regular 2D displays in the presence of compression distortions. As there is no established or generally agreed on compression methodology for digital hologram compression on the hologram plane with available implementations, a set of state-of-the-art compression codecs, namely, HEVC, AV1, and JPEG2000, were used for compression of the digital holograms on the object plane. Both computer-generated and optically generated holograms were considered. Two subjective tests were conducted to evaluate distortions caused by compression. The first subjective test was conducted on the reconstructed amplitude images of central views, while the second test was conducted on pseudovideos generated from the reconstructed amplitudes of different views. The subjective quality assessment was based on mean opinion scores. A selection of objective quality metrics was evaluated, and their correlations with mean opinion scores were computed. The VIFp metrics appeared to have the highest correlation

    Ablation of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation using a second‐generation cryoballoon catheter or contact‐force sensing radiofrequency ablation catheter: A comparison of costs and long‐term clinical outcomes

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    IntroductionAlthough noninferiority of cryoballoon ablation (CBA) and radiofrequency catheter ablation for antral pulmonary vein isolation (APVI) has been reported in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (PAF), it is not clear whether contact force sensing (CF‐RFA) and CBA with the second‐generation catheter have similar procedural costs and long‐term outcomes. The objective of this study is to compare the long‐term efficacy and cost implications of CBA and CF‐RFA in patients with PAF.Methods and resultsA first APVI was performed in 146 consecutive patients (age: 63 ± 10 years, men: 95 [65%], left atrial diameter: 42 ± 6 mm) with PAF using CBA (71) or CF‐RFA (75). Clinical outcomes and procedural costs were compared. The mean procedure time was significantly shorter with CBA than with CF‐RFA (98 ± 39 vs. 158 ± 47 minutes, P < 0.0001). Despite a higher equipment cost in the CBA than the CF‐RFA group, the total procedure cost was similar between the two groups (P = 0.26), primarily driven by a shorter procedure duration that resulted in a lower anesthesia cost. At 25 ± 5 months after a single ablation procedure, 51 patients (72%) in the CBA, and 55 patients (73%) in the CF‐RFA groups remained free from atrial arrhythmias without antiarrhythmic drug therapy (P = 0.84).ConclusionsThe procedure duration was approximately 60 minutes shorter with CBA than CF‐RFA. The procedural costs were similar with both approaches. At 2 years after a single procedure, CBA and CF‐RFA have similar single‐procedure efficacies of 72–73%.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142442/1/jce13378_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142442/2/jce13378.pd
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