Title :
The rate variability-distortion (VD) curve of encoded video and its impact on statistical multiplexing
Author :
Seeling, Patrick ; Reisslein, Martin
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Arizona State Univ., Tempe, AZ, USA
Abstract :
Encoded video is expected to contribute a significant portion of the load on future communication systems and networks, which often employ statistical multiplexing. In such systems, the number of video streams that can be supported depends both on the mean bit rate as well as bit rate variability of the video streams. At the same time, the utility (revenue) earned from video streaming depends both on the number of supported video streams as well as their quality level. In this paper we examine the interplay between video quality, traffic variability, and utility for open-loop encoded video. We introduce the rate variability-distortion (VD) curve which relates the bit rate variability to the quality level of an encoded video. We find that the VD curve generally exhibits a characteristic "hump" behavior of first increasing, peaking, and subsequently decreasing variability for increasing quality. We examine the impact of video content characteristics, encoding parameters, and traffic smoothing on the VD behavior. We describe a methodology for assessing (i) the set of the video streams that can be supported with a statistical quality of service requirement, and (ii) the utility earned from video streaming over a link. This methodology is based on the rate-distortion and rate variability-distortion characteristics of the videos. We find that the statistical multiplexing gain and the utility as a function of the video quality level typically exhibit a "hump" similar to the VD curve.
Keywords :
data compression; error statistics; rate distortion theory; smoothing methods; statistical multiplexing; telecommunication traffic; video coding; video streaming; VD curve; mean bit rate; open-loop encoded video; rate variability-distortion; statistical multiplexing; traffic smoothing; video content characteristics; video quality; video stream; Bit rate; Communication system traffic; Encoding; Multimedia systems; Quantization; Scalability; Smoothing methods; Streaming media; Telecommunication traffic; Video compression; Network utility; statistical multiplexing; variable bit rate video; video content; video quality; video streaming; video traffic;
Journal_Title :
Broadcasting, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBC.2005.851121