DocumentCode :
679761
Title :
What are good CGS/MGS configurations for H.264 quality scalable coding?
Author :
Shih-Hsuan Yang ; Wei-Lune Tang
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Inf. Eng., Nat. Taipei Univ. of Technol., Taipei, Taiwan
fYear :
2011
fDate :
18-21 July 2011
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
6
Abstract :
Scalable video coding (SVC) encodes image sequences into a single bit stream that can be adapted to various network and terminal capabilities. The H.264/AVC standard includes three kinds of video scalability, spatial scalability, temporal scalability, and quality scalability. Among them, quality scalability refers to image sequences of the same spatio-temporal resolution but with different fidelity levels. Two options of quality scalability are adopted in H.264/AVC, namely CGS (coarse-grain quality scalable coding) and MGS (medium-grain quality scalability), and they may be used in combinations. A refinement layer in CGS is obtained by re-quantizing the (residual) texture signal with a smaller quantization step size (QP). Using the CGS alone, however, may incur notable PSNR penalty and high encoding complexity if numerous rate points are required. MGS partitions the transform coefficients of a CGS layer into several MGS sub-layers and distributes them in different NAL units. The use of MGS may increase the adaptation flexibility, improve the coding efficiency, and reduce the coding complexity. In this paper, we investigate the CGS/MGS configurations that lead to good performance. From extensive experiments using the JSVM (Joint Scalable Video Model), however, we find that MGS should be carefully employed. Although MGS always reduces the encoding complexity as compared to using CGS alone, its rate-distortion is unstable. While MGS typically provides better or comparable rate-distortion performance for the cases with eight rate points or more, some configurations may cause an unexpected PSNR drop with an increased bit rate. This anomaly is currently under investigation.
Keywords :
encoding; image sequences; quantisation (signal); video coding; CGS-MGS configurations; H.264 quality scalable coding; H.264-AVC standard; JSVM; SVC; coarse-grain quality scalable coding; encoding complexity; image sequences; joint scalable video model; medium-grain quality scalability; quantization step size; refinement layer; residual texture signal; scalable video coding; spatial scalability; spatiotemporal resolution; temporal scalability; video scalability; Encoding; Rate-distortion; Scalability; Static VAr compensators; Streaming media; Transforms; Video coding; Coding complexity; H.264/AVC; Rate-distortion performance; Scalable video coding;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Signal Processing and Multimedia Applications (SIGMAP), 2011 Proceedings of the International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Seville
Type :
conf
Filename :
6731279
Link To Document :
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