Author_Institution :
Philips Res. Labs., Briarcliff Manor, NY, USA
Abstract :
Advanced broadcast manipulation of TV sequences and enhanced user interfaces for TV systems have resulted in an increased amount of pre- and post-editing of video sequences, where graphical information is inserted. However, in the current broadcasting chain, there are no provisions for enabling an efficient transmission/storage of these mixed video and graphics signals and, at this emerging stage of DTV systems, introducing new standards is not desired. Nevertheless, in the professional video communication chain between content provider and broadcaster and locally, in the DTV receiver, proprietary video-graphics compression schemes can be used to enable more efficient transmission/storage of mixed video and graphics signals. For example, in the DTV receiver case this will lead to a significant memory-cost reduction. To preserve a high overall image quality, the video and graphics data require independent coding systems, matched with their specific visual and statistical properties. We introduce various efficient algorithms that support both the lossless (contour, runlength and arithmetic coding) and the lossy (block predictive coding) compression of graphics data. If the graphics data are a-priori mixed with video and the graphics position is unknown at compression time, an accurate detection mechanism is applied to distinguish the two signals, such that independent coding algorithms can be employed for each data-type. In the DTV memory-reduction scenario, an overall bit-rate control completes the system, ensuring a fixed compression factor of 2-3 per frame without sacrificing the quality of the graphics
Keywords :
computer graphics; data compression; digital storage; digital television; image sequences; signal detection; television broadcasting; television receivers; video coding; DTV communication systems; DTV receiver; TV sequences; TV systems; arithmetic coding; bit-rate control; block predictive coding; broadcasting; content provider; contour coding; efficient algorithms; fixed compression factor; graphical information; graphics; graphics data; graphics quality; graphics signal transmission/storage; hybrid video compression; image quality; independent coding algorithms; lossless compression; lossy compression; memory-cost reduction; runlength coding; signal detection mechanism; statistical properties; user interfaces; video communication; video signal transmission/storage; video-graphics compression; visual properties; Arithmetic; Digital TV; Graphics; Image coding; Image quality; Multimedia communication; TV broadcasting; User interfaces; Video compression; Video sequences;