DocumentCode :
541132
Title :
Exploring the distributed video coding in a quality assessment context
Author :
Banitalebi, Amin ; Nader-Esfahani, Said
Author_Institution :
Wireless Multimedia Signal Process. Lab., Univ. of Tehran, Tehran, Iran
fYear :
2010
fDate :
4-6 Dec. 2010
Firstpage :
695
Lastpage :
700
Abstract :
In the popular video coding trend, the encoder has the task to exploit both spatial and temporal redundancies present in the video sequence, which is a complex procedure; As a result almost all video encoders have five to ten times more complexity than their decoders. In a video compression process, one of the main tasks at the encoder side is motion estimation which is to extract the temporal correlation between frames. Distributed video coding (DVC) proposed the idea that can lead to low complexity encoders and higher complexity decoders. DVC is a new paradigm in video compression based on the information theoretic ideas of Slepian-Wolf and Wyner-Ziv theorems. Wyner-Ziv coding is naturally robust against transmission errors and can be used for joint source and channel coding. Side Information is one of the key components of the Wyner-Ziv decoder. Better side information generation will result in better functionality of Wyner-Ziv coder. In this paper we proposed a new method that can generate side information with a better quality and thus better compression. We´ve used HVS (human visual system) based image quality metrics as our quality criterion. The motion estimation we´ve used in the decoder is modified due to these metrics such that we could obtain finer side information. The motion compensation is optimized for perceptual quality metrics and leads to better side information generation compared to conventional MSE (mean squared error) or SAD (sum of absolute difference) based motion compensation currently used in the literature. Better motion compensation means better compression.
Keywords :
channel coding; data compression; decoding; image sequences; motion estimation; video coding; Slepian-Wolf theorem; Wyner-Ziv theorem; channel coding; distributed video coding; encoder; human visual system; image quality metric; mean squared error; motion compensation; motion estimation; quality assessment context; spatial redundancy; sum of absolute difference; temporal correlation extraction; temporal redundancy; video compression process; video sequence; Complexity theory; Decoding; Encoding; Measurement; Motion estimation; Silicon; Video coding; distributed video coding; motion compensation; structural similarity; visual information fidelity;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Telecommunications (IST), 2010 5th International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Tehran
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8183-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISTEL.2010.5734112
Filename :
5734112
Link To Document :
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