Title of article :
Automatic Foveation for Video Compression Using a Neurobiological Model of Visual Attention
Author/Authors :
C. Ackerman and L. Itti، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
We evaluate the applicability of a biologically-motivated
algorithm to select visually-salient regions of interest in video
streams for multiply-foveated video compression. Regions are selected
based on a nonlinear integration of low-level visual cues,
mimicking processing in primate occipital, and posterior parietal
cortex. A dynamic foveation filter then blurs every frame, increasingly
with distance from salient locations. Sixty-three variants of
the algorithm (varying number and shape of virtual foveas, maximum
blur, and saliency competition) are evaluated against an outdoor
video scene, using MPEG-1 and constant-quality MPEG-4
(DivX) encoding. Additional compression radios of 1.1 to 8.5 are
achieved by foveation. Two variants of the algorithm are validated
against eye fixations recorded from four to six human observers
on a heterogeneous collection of 50 video clips (over 45 000 frames
in total). Significantly higher overlap than expected by chance is
found between human and algorithmic foveations.With both variants,
foveated clips are, on average, approximately half the size of
unfoveated clips, for both MPEG-1 and MPEG-4. These results
suggest a general-purpose usefulness of the algorithm in improving
compression ratios of unconstrained video.
Keywords :
Eye movements , video compression , Saliency , foveated , visual attention. , Bottom up
Journal title :
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING
Journal title :
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING