Title :
Second-generation error concealment for video transport over error prone channels
Author :
Chen, Trista Pei-chun ; Chen, Tsuhan
Author_Institution :
Electr. & Comput. Eng., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Abstract :
Video transport over error prone channels may result in loss or erroneous decoding of the video. Error concealment is an effective mechanism to reconstruct the video content. In this paper, we review different error concealment methods and introduce a new framework, which we refer to as second-generation error concealment. All the error concealment methods reconstruct the lost video content by making use of some a priori knowledge about the video content. First-generation error concealment builds such a priori in a heuristic manner. The proposed second-generation error concealment builds the a priori by modeling the statistics of the video content. Context-based models are trained with the correctly decoded video content, and then used to replenish the lost video content. Trained models capture the statistics of the video content and thus reconstruct the lost video content better than reconstruction by heuristics.
Keywords :
data compression; decoding; image reconstruction; interpolation; principal component analysis; video coding; visual communication; PCA; context-based models; decoding; error concealment methods; error prone channels; first-generation error concealment; heuristic-based error concealment methods; interpolation; principal component analysis; second-generation error concealment; spatial/spectral error concealment; trained models; video coding; video content reconstruction; video content statistics modeling; video decoding; video transport; Automatic repeat request; Computer errors; Context modeling; Decoding; Error analysis; Error correction; Forward error correction; Image reconstruction; Interpolation; Propagation losses;
Conference_Titel :
Image Processing. 2002. Proceedings. 2002 International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7622-6
DOI :
10.1109/ICIP.2002.1037950