Low complexity in-loop perceptual video coding

PhD thesis


Joshi, Y. 2016. Low complexity in-loop perceptual video coding. PhD thesis Middlesex University Science and Technology
TypePhD thesis
TitleLow complexity in-loop perceptual video coding
AuthorsJoshi, Y.
Abstract

The tradition of broadcast video is today complemented with user generated content, as portable devices support video coding. Similarly, computing is becoming ubiquitous, where Internet of Things (IoT) incorporate heterogeneous networks to communicate with personal and/or infrastructure devices. Irrespective, the emphasises is on bandwidth and processor efficiencies, meaning increasing the signalling options in video encoding. Consequently, assessment for pixel differences applies uniform cost to be processor efficient, in contrast the Human Visual System (HVS) has non-uniform sensitivity based upon lighting, edges and textures. Existing perceptual assessments, are natively incompatible and processor demanding, making perceptual video coding (PVC) unsuitable for these environments. This research allows existing perceptual assessment at the native level using low complexity techniques, before producing new pixel-base image quality assessments (IQAs). To manage these IQAs a framework was developed and implemented in the high efficiency video coding (HEVC) encoder. This resulted in bit-redistribution, where greater bits and smaller partitioning were allocated to perceptually significant regions. Using a HEVC optimised processor the timing increase was < +4% and < +6% for video streaming and recording applications respectively, 1/3 of an existing low complexity PVC solution. Future work should be directed towards perceptual quantisation which offers the potential for perceptual coding gain.

Department nameScience and Technology
Institution nameMiddlesex University
Publication dates
Print14 Feb 2017
Publication process dates
Deposited14 Feb 2017
Accepted24 Oct 2016
Output statusPublished
Accepted author manuscript
LanguageEnglish
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