DocumentCode
63705
Title
Delay-Constrained Video Transmission: Quality-Driven Resource Allocation and Scheduling
Author
Khalek, Amin Abdel ; Caramanis, Constantine ; Heath, Robert W.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
Volume
9
Issue
1
fYear
2015
fDate
Feb. 2015
Firstpage
60
Lastpage
75
Abstract
Real-time video demands quality-of-service (QoS) guarantees such as delay bounds for end-user satisfaction. Furthermore, the tolerable delay varies depending on the use case such as live streaming or two-way video conferencing. Due to the inherently stochastic nature of wireless fading channels, deterministic delay bounds are difficult to guarantee. Instead, we propose providing statistical delay guarantees using the concept of effective capacity. We consider a multiuser setup whereby different users have (possibly different) delay QoS constraints. We derive the resource allocation policy that maximizes the sum video quality and applies to any quality metric with concave rate-quality mapping. We show that the optimal operating point per user is such that the rate-distortion slope is the inverse of the supported video source rate per unit bandwidth, a key metric we refer to as the source spectral efficiency. We extend the resource allocation policy to capture video quality-driven adaptive user-subcarrier assignment in wideband channels as well as capture the impact of adaptive modulation and coding. We also solve the alternative problem of fairness-based resource allocation whereby the objective is to maximize the minimum video quality across users. Finally, we derive user admission and scheduling policies that enable selecting a maximal user subset such that all selected users can meet their statistical delay requirement. Results show that video users with differentiated QoS requirements can achieve similar video quality with vastly different resource requirements. Thus, QoS-aware scheduling and resource allocation enable supporting significantly more users under the same resource constraints.
Keywords
adaptive codes; adaptive modulation; fading channels; quality of service; rate distortion theory; real-time systems; resource allocation; telecommunication scheduling; teleconferencing; video communication; video signal processing; video streaming; QoS; adaptive coding; adaptive modulation; adaptive user-subcarrier assignment; concave rate-quality mapping; delay constrained video transmission; live streaming; quality driven resource allocation; quality metric; quality of service; rate distortion slope; real-time video; scheduling policy; source spectral efficiency; statistical delay requirement; sum video quality; tolerable delay; two-way video conferencing; user admission; wideband channels; wireless fading channels; Bandwidth; Delays; Quality assessment; Quality of service; Resource management; Streaming media; Video recording; Resource allocation; effective capacity; perceptual video quality; rate distortion theory; statistical QoS;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Selected Topics in Signal Processing, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1932-4553
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSTSP.2014.2332304
Filename
6840975
Link To Document