GB2194409A - Compatible high definition video transmission systems - Google Patents

Compatible high definition video transmission systems Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2194409A
GB2194409A GB08710915A GB8710915A GB2194409A GB 2194409 A GB2194409 A GB 2194409A GB 08710915 A GB08710915 A GB 08710915A GB 8710915 A GB8710915 A GB 8710915A GB 2194409 A GB2194409 A GB 2194409A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
standard
signal
line
samples
input
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Granted
Application number
GB08710915A
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GB2194409B (en
GB8710915D0 (en
Inventor
Richard Storey
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British Broadcasting Corp
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British Broadcasting Corp
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Publication date
Priority claimed from GB08600797A external-priority patent/GB2169626B/en
Priority claimed from GB868620110A external-priority patent/GB8620110D0/en
Application filed by British Broadcasting Corp filed Critical British Broadcasting Corp
Publication of GB8710915D0 publication Critical patent/GB8710915D0/en
Publication of GB2194409A publication Critical patent/GB2194409A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2194409B publication Critical patent/GB2194409B/en
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Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N11/00Colour television systems
    • H04N11/24High-definition television systems
    • H04N11/28High-definition television systems involving bandwidth reduction, e.g. subsampling

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Multimedia (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Television Systems (AREA)

Abstract

An HDTV video signal with 1249 lines per picture is transmitted over a transmission channel designed for 625 lines per picture by transmitting alternate samples of two lines of the 1249 line signal on a single line of the 625 line signal. An HDTV receiver can interpolate to give a 1249 line picture but a 625 line receiver will still receive a signal that is adequately compatible to give a display. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Video transmission systems BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to a method of transmitting a video signal at a higher line standard over a transmission channel for signals at a lower standard, and to transmitting and receiving apparatus for use in the method.
Various methods have been proposed for transmitting high definition images, at a reduced bandwidth, but at the same basic line rate as is used for source and display. One example of this type of system is NHK's "MUSE", which operates entirely at 1125 lines. Other techniques have been proposed for packing extra spatial detail, but usually less than is claimed for HDTV ("highdefinition television"), into a standard channel such as C MAC or D2-MAC. These two approaches are described respectively in the following papers, (1) Ninomaya, Y. et al. 1984. A single Channei HDTV Broadcast System-The Muse. NHK Laboratory Note No 304, and (2) Arragon, J P. et al. 1986. Transmission d'images de Television a Haut Definition Compatible avec le Standard D2-MAC Paquet. Acta Electronica 27,1-2.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION In one aspect the invention provides a method of transmitting a video signal originating at a relatively higher line standard (lines per picture) over a transmission channel for signals at a lower line standard by transmitting samples of more than one line of the higher standard on a single line at the lower standard. A receiver capable of receiving signals at the higher standard can separate out the samples to reconstruct the higher standard, while a receiver capable of receiving only signals at the lower standard will still receive a workable signal. A degree of compatibility is thus retained.
The invention in its- various aspects is defined in the appended claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRA WINGS The invention will now be described in more detail by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Figure 1 is a diagram illustrating the bandlimiting provided in a bandwidth compression prefilter in three dimensional space for stationary picture areas (or well-correlated moving areas); Figure 2 is a diagram similar to Figure 1 for areas in which uncorrelated movement occurs; Figure 3 is a diagram illustrating the sampling structure for a 4:1 bandwidth reduction; Figure 4 is a diagram illustrating the subsequent re-ordering of the samples to produce a signal for transmission at standard e.g. 625 line rate:: Figure 5 is a block circuit diagram of a circuit which can be used at the transmitter to re-order or "shuffle" the samples, using two RAM stores; Figure 6 is a diagram illustrating the sample shuffling with the circuit of Figure 5 on an illustrative line having only eight samples; Figure 7 is a block circuit diagram of a sample shuffler using one RAM circuit; and Figure 8 is a diagram similar to Figure 6 for the circuit of Figure 7.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS This specification describes a method of allowing transmission of 1249-line HDTV resolution signals via a 625 line based transmission channel.
In implementing the method the first operation is to bandwidth reduce the signal. This operation can be done by applying prefilters as shown in Figures 1 and 2 to stationary and moving areas respectively. Figures 1 and 2 illustrate the band limiting applied in a threedimensional space having a horizontal frequency axis m in cycles per picture width (c/pw), a vertical frequency axis n in cycles per picture height (c/ph) and a time axis f related to the field frequency. The stationaryarea filtering is defined by the octohedral shape shown in Figure 1 which has apices half-way along the m and n axes to the next repeat and only a quarter of the way along the f axis.In the moving-area filter characteristic defined by the cuboid shape in Figure 2, the filter surface intersects the m and n axes one quarter of the way along while the f axis is intersected half-way along. A movement detector is used to apply the characteristic of Figure 2 in areas of movement and the characteristics of Figure 1 in stationary areas.
An added level of sophistication is to add motion vector measurement and compensation as described in our British Patent Application 86 17320 and in a paper read by THOMAS, G.A., at the 128th SMPTE Technical Conference, 24-29 October 1986, New York, Preprint No. 128-49 to extend the spatial detail available from the pre-filter of Figure 1 to all well-correiated moving areas. The use of motion vector compensation will be highly desirable in a fully matured bandwidth reduction system since the eye's visual acuity for tracked motion, at the speeds commonly encountered in television (say a maximum of 10 degrees/sec), is little different from its value for stationary detail.
The second step is to re-sample each of the pre-filtered signals at a lower rate, in a way which avoids spectral overlap in critical areas and packs the resulting repeat spectra neatly into the availahle space. A suitable sampling structure, in which a 4:1 reduction is achieved by spreading the transmission over four fields rather than the normal two, is shown in Figure 3. Other structures could be used. Prior to resampling or sub-sampling samples occur on each picture at each of the points marked 0 in the top left-hand corner of Figure 3. However, in this example a 4:1- or 8:1 reduction is obtained (depending upon whether the 1249 line signal is interlaced or sequential) by only transmitting the samples marked with the numbers 1 to 4, and in particular on field 1 only transmitting the samples marked 1, etc.
This sub-sampling operation is in fact similar to that used in "MUSE", mentioned above, for example. The sub-sampling is of course the same whether the filter characteristic of Figure 1 or that of Figure 2 is being used.
Note that this structure is not directly suited to transmission in a 625 line channel.
The sub-sampling causes repeats of the frequency spectra in the three-dimensional space of Figure 1 and 2. The filter characteristic shapes are such that when repeated the filter pass bands, i.e. the volumes defined by the shapes, do not overlap.
In the third step the samples are re-organised for transmission by vertical re-positioning.
This line standard conversion operation is illustrated in Figure 2b for the first two fields in the four field sequence. All the samples from lines 1 and 3 of the 1249 format which are transmitted on field 1 are now transmitted on line 1 of the 625 format. The following two fields are treated in exactly the same manner.
In this way, twice the number of samples can be packaged into half the number of transmitted lines, to form a 625 line based system.
Using this packaging scheme, an HDTV receiver equipped with a picture store can reposition the samples before interpolation, to produce a high definition image as before. In other words the HDTV receiver can undo the positioning operation of Figure 2b to redistribute the field 1 samples back between lines 1 and 3 of the 1249 line format.
At the same time, a conventional 625 line receiver would doubtless produce a recognisable picture, without the need for a display upconverter. There would however be aliasing additional to that caused by the bandwidth reduction system alone. We believe it likely that the total aliasing would not be significantly worse than that arising from the spectral folding in stationary and wellcorrelated moving areas introduced by the bandwidth compression.
Figure 5 shows in block schematic form a circuit for vertical re-positioning of the samples as illustrated in Figure 4. The circuit of Figure 5 uses two RAM stores 4,5 and a simple address generator.
In Figure 5 the appropriate samples from two consecutive input lines are concatenated by means of a delay 1 of a length equal to the line blanking period of the incoming vision signal, as shown in Figure 6, and a selector switch 2. These newly concatenated lines are written alternately into the RAM stores 4 and 5 by means of distributor switch 3. When the first RAM 4 is being written into, the second RAM 5 is being read from, and vice versa.
The appropriate output data is selected by a switch 6 which operates in antiphase to switch 3.
A counter 7 generates a basic address sequence of length 2M where M is the number of samples per input line. Thus counter 7 counts from zero to 2M-1. This basic sequence is used to address whichever RAM is currently being written into. Address routing is achieved by switches 8 and 9. A modified address sequence is required to read samples from the RAMs with the appropriate reordering. This sequence is generated by an adder 10 and a switch 11. The monotonic address sequence from counter 7 is divided by two by bit shifting to give a count which increments for every second sampie. The least significant bit is now used to control switch 11 which feeds a zero to adder 10 when the bit is a logic low and the number M when it is a logic high. Thus all even addresses are halved, and all odd addresses are halved and increased by M.
Figure 6 - shows that this is the required form of re-positioning or "shuffling" for the samples. Figure 6 is described in relation to a line length of only 8 selected samples, purely as a simple illustration.
Figure 7 illustrates an alternative configuration using a single RAM store 12 and a more complex address generator 13. The RAM store performs a read operation immediately followed by a write to the same address, as shown in Figure 8. It follows that the address sequence must be modified for each successive output line in order for the output samples to appear appropriately shuffled. This string of address sequences does repeat however, but the repeat period is dependent upon the number of samples per output line. Active line lengths for CCIR recommendation 601 and the MAC transmission standard are 720 and 697 samples respectively. An output line length of 720 samples repeats after 358 lines, and a line length of 698 samples repeats after 39 lines (697 has an enormously long repeat period, probably because its two factors 17 and 41 are both prime numbers). The address generator will therefore be more complex than for the previous example though there are savings in RAM storage.
In the decoder, circuits similar to Figure 5 or Figure 7 can be used with the delay 1 and switch 2 transferred to the output of the circuit. The commutation must be approximately rephased, in Figure 5 by reversing the polarity of the switches 2, 8 and 9, and In summary, a method is proposed for the transmission of s 4:1 bandwidth reduced television signal, having a resolution approaching that of a 1249 line source standard, through a 625 line based transmission channel. The performance of a HDTV receiver is not compromised by repackaging the transmitted information, nor is the complexity of the receiver significantly increased.
A recognisable picture should be-produced when a conventional receiver is fed directly with the bandwidth reduced signal. There will however be a degree of moving alias while the encoder is applying the high spatial detail pre-filter of Figure la. This aliasing will therefore be confined to stationary and well correlated moving areas. It appears that the additional aliasing caused by re-packaging the signal for transmission via a 625 line based channel, will be negligible compared to that caused by not using a suitable post-filter.
While the invention has been described in terms of a 1249 line HDTV signal and a 625 line based channel it will be appreciated that it is not limited to such numerical values. Also it may be employed in bandwidth reduction such as recording and the terms "transmission" and "transmission channel" should be construed accordingly.

Claims (10)

1. A method of transmitting a video signal originating at a relatively higher line standard over a transmission channel for signals at a lower line standard, comprising transmitting samples of more than one line of the higher standard on a single line at the lower standard.
2. Transmitting apparatus for transmitting a video signal comprising input means for receiving an input video signal at a relatively higher line- standard, conversion means for converting the input video signal to a signal at a lower line standard, and output means for applying an output signal at the lower line standard to a transmission channel, in which the conversion means comprises means for seiecting samples of more than one line of the input signal at the higher standard to form a single line of the output signal at the lower standard.
3. Apparatus according to claim 2, in which samples from two input lines at the higher standard are used to form a single output line at the lower standard, the samples of the output signal being derived alternatively from the two input lines.
4. Apparatus according to claim 3, in which the two input lines are adjacent lines in one field of an interlaced signal.
5. Apparatus according to claim 2, in which the conversion means comprises RAM store means and addressing circuitry therefor.
6. Apparatus according to claim 2, including bandwidth compression means prior to the conversion means and comprising pre-filter means and re-sampling means.
7. Receiving apparatus for receiving a video signal comprising input means for receiving from a transmission channel an input video signal at a relatively lower line standard, conversion means for converting the input video signal to a signal at a higher line standard, and output means for supplying an output signal at the higher line standard for display or subsequent processing, in which the conversion means comprises means for distributing samples on a single line of the input signal at the lower standard to form the samples for more than one line of the output signal at the higher standard.
8. Apparatus according to claim 7, in which the samples of the single line of the input signal at the lower standard are used to form two output lines at the higher standard, each line at the output standard being derived from alternate samples at the input standard.
9. Apparatus according to claim 8, in which the two output lines are adjacent lines in one field of an interlaced signal.
10. Receiving apparatus for receiving a vi deo signal transmitted according to the method of claim 1, comprising input means for receiving from 'a transmission channel the transmitted video signal at a relatively lower line standard, conversion means for converting the input video signal to a signal at a higher line standard, and output means for supplying an output signal at the higher line standard for display or subsequent processing, in which the conversion means comprises means for distri buting samples on a single line of the input signal at the lower standard to form the samples for two output lines at the higher standard, each line at the output standard being derived from alternate samples at the input standard and the resolution of the output standard being substantially the same as that of the original higher line standard signal.
10. Apparatus according to claim 7, in which the conversion means comprises RAM store means and addressing circuitry therefor.
11. Apparatus according to claim 7, including interpolation means coupled to receive the output of the conversion means.
12. A method of transmitting a video signal, substantially as herein described with reference to and as shown in the accompanying drawings.
13. Transmitting apparatus for transmitting a video signal substantially as herein described with reference to the drawings.
14. Receiving apparatus for receiving a video signal substantially as herein described with reference to the drawings.
CLAIMS Amendments to the claims have been filed, and have the following effect: Claims 1 to 8 above have been deleted or textually amended.
New or textually amended claims have been filed as follows: Claims 9 to 14 above have been renumbered as 11 to 16 and their appendancies corrected.
1. A method of transmitting a video signal originating at a relatively higher line standard over a transmission channel for signals at a lower line standard, comprising collapsing two lines of the higher line standard into a single line of the lower standardrand transmitting samples at substantially a quarter of the sample rate of the higher line standard, the bandwidth of the transmitted signal being substantially one quarter of that of the higher line standard signal, and the samples being so chosen that the transmitted signal may be resolved to the full resolution of the higher line standard signal.
2. A method according to claim 1 wherein the higher line standard signal is prefiltered and then quincuxialiy resampled at a lower rate, the resampled signal being transmitted over twice the number of fields as the prefiltered signal.
3. A method according to claim 2 wherein the samples of the resampled signal are verti cally repositioned by moving samples transmitted on alternate lines of a given field to a single line at the lower line standard.
4. Transmitting apparatus for transmitting a video signal comprising input means for re ceiving an input video signal at a relatively higher line standard, conversion means for converting the input video signal to a signal at a lower line standard, and output means for applying an output signal at the lower line standard to a transmission channel, in which the conversion means comprises means for selecting samples of more than one line of the input signal at the higher standard to form a single line of the output signal at the lower standard, the bandwidth of the selected samples being substantially a quarter of the bandwidth of the higher line standard, and the samples being so chosen that the transmitted signal may be resolved to the full resolution of the higher line standard signal.
5. Apparatus according to claim 4, in which samples from two input lines at the higher standard are used to form a single output line at the lower -standard, the samples of the out put signal being derived alternately from the two input lines.
6. Apparatus according to claim 5, in which the two input lines are adjacent lines in one field of an interlaced signal.
7. Apparatus according to claim 4, in which the conversion means comprises RAM store means and addresaing circuitry therefor.
8. Apparatus according to claim 4, including bandwidth compression means prior to the conversion means and comprising pre-filter means and re-sampling means.
9. Apparatus according to claim 4 in which the re-sampling means includes means for transmitting samples of the re-sampled signal over twice the number of fields as the prefil tered signal, and vertjcal repositioning means for moving samples transmitted on alternate lines of a given field to a single line at the lower line standard.
GB8710915A 1986-01-14 1987-05-08 Video transmission systems Expired - Fee Related GB2194409B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08600797A GB2169626B (en) 1985-01-14 1986-01-14 A double twist winding machine
GB868620110A GB8620110D0 (en) 1986-08-19 1986-08-19 Video transmission system

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GB8710915D0 GB8710915D0 (en) 1987-06-10
GB2194409A true GB2194409A (en) 1988-03-02
GB2194409B GB2194409B (en) 1990-08-15

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1987005770A1 (en) 1986-03-19 1987-09-24 British Broadcasting Corporation Video signal processing for bandwidth reduction
EP0347325A1 (en) * 1988-06-16 1989-12-20 France Telecom Method and installation for broadcasting compatible high-definition programmes
EP0400752A1 (en) * 1989-06-02 1990-12-05 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Method of and arrangement for reducing the number of lines of a picture signal, as well as an arrangement for increasing the number of lines of a picture signal
GB2240230A (en) * 1990-01-18 1991-07-24 British Broadcasting Corp Field-rate upconversion of television signals prior to bandwidth compression
US5053857A (en) * 1988-07-28 1991-10-01 British Broadcasting Corporation Television signals
EP0475788A2 (en) * 1990-09-14 1992-03-18 British Broadcasting Corporation Video signal transmission
GB2307129A (en) * 1995-11-09 1997-05-14 Sony Uk Ltd Video down-conversion

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0114693A2 (en) * 1983-01-25 1984-08-01 Robert Bosch Gmbh High resolution colour video signal transmission system
GB2161669A (en) * 1982-02-24 1986-01-15 Rca Corp Television systems

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS59182686A (en) * 1983-04-01 1984-10-17 Hitachi Ltd Picture signal processing system
GB8616616D0 (en) * 1986-07-08 1986-08-13 Philips Nv Transmission system
GB8618912D0 (en) * 1986-08-01 1986-09-10 British Telecomm Television transmission

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2161669A (en) * 1982-02-24 1986-01-15 Rca Corp Television systems
EP0114693A2 (en) * 1983-01-25 1984-08-01 Robert Bosch Gmbh High resolution colour video signal transmission system

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1987005770A1 (en) 1986-03-19 1987-09-24 British Broadcasting Corporation Video signal processing for bandwidth reduction
EP0347325A1 (en) * 1988-06-16 1989-12-20 France Telecom Method and installation for broadcasting compatible high-definition programmes
FR2633136A1 (en) * 1988-06-16 1989-12-22 France Etat METHOD AND INSTALLATION FOR BROADCASTING COMPATIBLE HIGH DEFINITION TELEVISION PROGRAMS
US5053857A (en) * 1988-07-28 1991-10-01 British Broadcasting Corporation Television signals
EP0400752A1 (en) * 1989-06-02 1990-12-05 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Method of and arrangement for reducing the number of lines of a picture signal, as well as an arrangement for increasing the number of lines of a picture signal
GB2240230A (en) * 1990-01-18 1991-07-24 British Broadcasting Corp Field-rate upconversion of television signals prior to bandwidth compression
GB2240230B (en) * 1990-01-18 1994-04-13 British Broadcasting Corp Field-rate upconversion of television signals
US5325199A (en) * 1990-01-18 1994-06-28 British Broadcasting Corporation Field-rate upconversion of television signals
EP0475788A2 (en) * 1990-09-14 1992-03-18 British Broadcasting Corporation Video signal transmission
EP0475788A3 (en) * 1990-09-14 1992-06-10 British Broadcasting Corporation Video signal transmission
GB2307129A (en) * 1995-11-09 1997-05-14 Sony Uk Ltd Video down-conversion
GB2307129B (en) * 1995-11-09 2000-01-26 Sony Uk Ltd Video down-conversion

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GB8710915D0 (en) 1987-06-10

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19950508