JPEG is one of the most widely used image formats, but in some ways remains
surprisingly unoptimized, perhaps because some natural optimizations would go
outside the standard that defines JPEG. We show how to improve JPEG compression
in a standard-compliant, backward-compatible manner, by finding improved
default quantization tables. We describe a simulated annealing technique that
has allowed us to find several quantization tables that perform better than the
industry standard, in terms of both compressed size and image fidelity.
Specifically, we derive tables that reduce the FSIM error by over 10% while
improving compression by over 20% at quality level 95 in our tests; we also
provide similar results for other quality levels. While we acknowledge our
approach can in some images lead to visible artifacts under large
magnification, we believe use of these quantization tables, or additional
tables that could be found using our methodology, would significantly reduce
JPEG file sizes with improved overall image quality.Comment: Appendix not included in arXiv version due to size restrictions. For
full paper go to:
http://www.eecs.harvard.edu/~michaelm/SimAnneal/PAPER/simulated-annealing-jpeg.pd