Title :
No-Reference Bitstream-Based Visual Quality Impairment Detection for High Definition H.264/AVC Encoded Video Sequences
Author :
Staelens, Nicolas ; Van Wallendael, Glenn ; Crombecq, Karel ; Vercammen, Nick ; De Cock, Jan ; Vermeulen, Brecht ; Van de Walle, Rik ; Dhaene, Tom ; Demeester, Piet
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. Technol., Ghent Univ., Ghent, Belgium
fDate :
6/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Ensuring and maintaining adequate Quality of Experience towards end-users are key objectives for video service providers, not only for increasing customer satisfaction but also as service differentiator. However, in the case of High Definition video streaming over IP-based networks, network impairments such as packet loss can severely degrade the perceived visual quality. Several standard organizations have established a minimum set of performance objectives which should be achieved for obtaining satisfactory quality. Therefore, video service providers should continuously monitor the network and the quality of the received video streams in order to detect visual degradations. Objective video quality metrics enable automatic measurement of perceived quality. Unfortunately, the most reliable metrics require access to both the original and the received video streams which makes them inappropriate for real-time monitoring. In this article, we present a novel no-reference bitstream-based visual quality impairment detector which enables real-time detection of visual degradations caused by network impairments. By only incorporating information extracted from the encoded bitstream, network impairments are classified as visible or invisible to the end-user. Our results show that impairment visibility can be classified with a high accuracy which enables real-time validation of the existing performance objectives.
Keywords :
IP networks; data compression; image sequences; object detection; video coding; video streaming; IP-based networks; customer satisfaction; end-users; high definition H.264/AVC encoded video sequences; high definition video streaming; network impairments; no-reference bitstream-based visual quality impairment detection; objective video quality metrics; packet loss; perceived quality automatic measurement; quality of experience; real-time monitoring; received video streams; video service providers; visual degradation detection; visual degradation real-time detection; Degradation; Encoding; Measurement; Real time systems; Streaming media; Video sequences; Visualization; H.264/AVC; high definition; no-reference; objective video quality; quality of experience (QoE);
Journal_Title :
Broadcasting, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBC.2012.2189334