Reporter :陳志明
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Transcript of Reporter :陳志明
Proxy-Based Reference Picture Selection for Error Resilient Conversational Video in Mobile Networks
Wei Tu and Eckehard Steinbach, IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology, VOL. 19, NO. 2, February 2009.
Reporter:陳志明
Outline Introduction Related Works Proxy-Based Reference Picture Select Simulation Results Conclusion
Introduction Conversational video requires very low delay. Decoding of erroneous or incomplete video
bit-stream leads to severe quality degradations.
Numerous studies have been performed to improve the error resiliency for video transmission over lossy channels.
Scenarios : Uplink Downlink Both
Introduction (con.)
Related Works Error resilience schemes used for comparison
Random intra-MB update(RIMU) Feedback multidecoder distortion estimation(F-
MDDE) NEWPRED RESCU
RIMU One way to stop temporal error propagation is
the periodic insertion of Intra-coded pictures or macroblocks (MBs).
There is no feedback information available. However, without accurate information about the channel statics, the efficiency of RIMU is limited, if the packet loss rate changes rapidly over a wide range.
F-MDDE A powerful yet computationally demanding
method is introduced to estimate the excepted reconstruction distortion.
If K is not large enough, the estimation will be inaccurate and affects the distortion estimation for later frames.
NEWPRED NEWPRED uses the feedback about lost
packets or correctly received packets to prevent the prediction from those image areas that have been corrupted. A-NEWPRED N-NEWPRED
NEWPRED(con.)
RESCU RESCU is to change the frame dependencies
in a video sequence such that a retransmission of lost information can be used for error recovery.
Proxy-Based Reference Picture Select It have three scenarios.
Downlink Error Recovery Uplink Error Recovery Combination Both
Downlink Error Recovery
Error propagation for FDRPS when frame is corrupted.
Uplink Error Recover
Adaptive RPS triggered by feedback from the base station to the sender
Combination Both
Error robust mobile video telephony using the proposed PRPS framework
Simulation Results H.264/AVC test software version JM 11.0 Test video :
The first 300 frame of the test video Foreman QCIF at 15fps
The first 300 frame of the test video Salesman QCIF at 15fps
Video frame structure : I-P-P-P-I-…
Max RTT on the uplink and downlink are 200 ms(RTT = 3).
The end-to-end round-trip delay(including the wireless and wireline networks ) is 400 ms(RTT = 6).
RIMU RD performance of RIMU for the Foreman
sequence and 1% random packet loss in both uplink and downlink.
F-MDDE RD performance of MDDE and F-MDDE with for
the Foreman sequence and 1% random packet loss in both uplink and downlink.
F-MDDE (con.) RD performance of F-MDDE for a RTT of 6
frames for the Foreman and Salesman sequences.
NEWPRED RD performance of NEWPRED for the Foreman
sequence for different RTTs.
RESCU RD performance of RESCU for the Foreman
sequence for different RTTs.
Adaptive RPS Performance of the adaptive RPS schemes
used for uplink error recovery, Foreman, RTT of 3 frames.
Proxy-Based Reference Picture Select RD performance of PRPS as a function of the
RTT on the uplink and downlink for a 5% packet loss channel. The mean burst length is 5 packets. The test sequence is Foreman.
The comparison (Foreman sequence) Performance of PRPS and the comparison
schemes for the Foreman sequence.
The comparison (Salesman sequence) Performance of PRPS and the comparison
schemes for the Salesman sequence.
The comparison (Packet loss rate and PSNR) Mean reconstruction quality as a function of
packet loss rate for a mean packet burst loss length of 5 for the Foreman sequence.
The comparison (uplink and downlink) 5% burst packet loss either on the uplink or
the downlink for the Foreman sequence at 150 kbps including all overheads.
we give the performance when either a wireless uplink or a wireless downlink is involved in the end-to-end transmission.
Conclusion Feedback information between the mobile user
and co-located base stations significantly decreases the feedback delay, and thus greatly improves the efficiency of error recovery.
The prediction distance is adjusted to the RTT of the downlink which gives us the opportunity to retransmit lose packets and to use retransmitted packets to stop error propagation.
Proxy-based RPS scheme is compatible with the h.264/AVC standard syntax and is of very low complexity at base stations.