DocumentCode
2295288
Title
Asynchronous video coding for wireless transport
Author
Messerschmidt, D.G. ; Reason, Johnathan M. ; Lao, Allen Y.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
fYear
1994
fDate
8-9 Dec 1994
Firstpage
138
Lastpage
145
Abstract
Wireless access to continuous-media services is becoming increasingly prevalent. An interactive video service is one such service, but existing compression standards are unsatisfactory for wireless packet-video services. We propose a novel strategy for video transport using a layered source coder in conjunction with a variable quality-of-service, multiple-substream abstraction for the transport. This abstraction specifically addresses the need to simultaneously obtain high spectral efficiency, good subjective quality and low perceptual delay on a wireless channel (perceptual delay is the effective end-to-end latency observed by the user). The abstraction also addresses the heterogenous transport resulting from the concatenation of a wireless access link with a broadband backbone network. We use asynchronous video reconstruction, running counter to current techniques which use strictly synchronous video processing. By doing so, we hope to achieve a perceptual delay that is much lower than the worst-case transport delay. By identifying packets to the transport with relaxed reliability and/or delay requirements, the transport can achieve high traffic capacity. Reasonable and promising simulation results are achieved, although much work remains on achieving significant video compression in this environment
Keywords
data compression; interactive video; multimedia communication; radio links; telecommunication traffic; video coding; wireless LAN; asynchronous video coding; broadband backbone network; continuous-media services; data compression standards; end-to-end latency; heterogenous transport; interactive video service; layered source coder; packet identification; perceptual delay; relaxed delay requirements; relaxed reliability requirements; simulation; spectral efficiency; subjective quality; traffic capacity; transport delay; variable quality-of-service, multiple-substream abstraction; video compression; wireless access link; wireless channel; wireless packet-video services; Counting circuits; Delay effects; Maintenance; Quality of service; Spine; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control; Video coding; Video compression; Videoconference;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Mobile Computing Systems and Applications, 1994. Proceedings., Workshop on
Conference_Location
Santa Cruz, CA
Print_ISBN
0-8186-6345-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MCSA.1994.513473
Filename
513473
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