DocumentCode :
342344
Title :
MPEG video quality prediction in a wireless system
Author :
Robert, P. Max ; Darwish, Ahmed M. ; Reed, Jeffrey H.
Author_Institution :
Mobile & Portable Radio Res. Group, Virginia Polytech. Inst. & State Univ., Blacksburg, VA, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
1999
fDate :
36342
Firstpage :
1490
Abstract :
Wireless systems under design today promise to deliver high-bandwidth applications to mobile users in dynamic channel environments. The protocol used to control the network in a wireless system may not necessarily be able to control bit errors in its payload. Therefore, it is important to assess the impact of bit errors in a delivered data stream. This paper concentrates on the effects of bit errors on an MPEG-2 digital video sequence. A basic decoupling between bit error rate (BER) and peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) was shown on previously published papers, signaling a loss of confidence on BER as a basic metric of digital system performance. This paper introduces a statistical approach to predicting video quality based solely on physical layer parameters. The mean error event length, λdistance, is a metric derived from the physical layer that can be used to predict the expected video quality across systems with different channel coding algorithms. This metric proved to be uniformly consistent in predicting video quality for sequences corrupted by additive white Gaussian noise and protected by convolutional, Reed-Solomon (RS), and concatenated (convolutional and RS) codes
Keywords :
AWGN; ISO standards; Reed-Solomon codes; channel coding; code standards; concatenated codes; convolutional codes; data compression; digital radio; error statistics; image sequences; land mobile radio; telecommunication standards; video coding; BER; IEC; ISO standard; MPEG video quality prediction; MPEG-2 digital video sequence; PSNR; RS codes; Reed-Solomon codes; additive white Gaussian noise; bit error rate; bit errors; channel coding algorithms; concatenated codes; convolutional codes; data stream; digital system performance; dynamic channel environments; high-bandwidth applications; mean error event length; peak signal-to-noise ratio; physical layer parameters; protocol; statistical approach; wireless system; Bit error rate; Control systems; Convolution; Convolutional codes; Error correction; PSNR; Payloads; Physical layer; Streaming media; Wireless application protocol;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Vehicular Technology Conference, 1999 IEEE 49th
Conference_Location :
Houston, TX
ISSN :
1090-3038
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5565-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/VETEC.1999.780595
Filename :
780595
Link To Document :
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