WO2005055618A1 - Method and system for video quality measurements - Google Patents
Method and system for video quality measurements Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO2005055618A1 WO2005055618A1 PCT/SG2004/000393 SG2004000393W WO2005055618A1 WO 2005055618 A1 WO2005055618 A1 WO 2005055618A1 SG 2004000393 W SG2004000393 W SG 2004000393W WO 2005055618 A1 WO2005055618 A1 WO 2005055618A1
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- video stream
- test video
- distortion
- feature
- measuring
- Prior art date
Links
Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N17/00—Diagnosis, testing or measuring for television systems or their details
- H04N17/004—Diagnosis, testing or measuring for television systems or their details for digital television systems
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N19/00—Methods or arrangements for coding, decoding, compressing or decompressing digital video signals
- H04N19/10—Methods or arrangements for coding, decoding, compressing or decompressing digital video signals using adaptive coding
- H04N19/134—Methods or arrangements for coding, decoding, compressing or decompressing digital video signals using adaptive coding characterised by the element, parameter or criterion affecting or controlling the adaptive coding
- H04N19/154—Measured or subjectively estimated visual quality after decoding, e.g. measurement of distortion
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N19/00—Methods or arrangements for coding, decoding, compressing or decompressing digital video signals
- H04N19/85—Methods or arrangements for coding, decoding, compressing or decompressing digital video signals using pre-processing or post-processing specially adapted for video compression
- H04N19/86—Methods or arrangements for coding, decoding, compressing or decompressing digital video signals using pre-processing or post-processing specially adapted for video compression involving reduction of coding artifacts, e.g. of blockiness
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N17/00—Diagnosis, testing or measuring for television systems or their details
- H04N17/02—Diagnosis, testing or measuring for television systems or their details for colour television signals
Definitions
- the present invention relates broadly to a method and system for measuring a quality of a test video stream.
- the colour-transformed original and decoded sequences are subjected to blocking and Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT), and the resultant DCT coefficients are then converted to the local contrast, which is defined as the ratio of the AC amplitude to the temporally low-pass filtered DC amplitude.
- DCT Discrete Cosine Transform
- a temporal recursive discrete second-order MR filtering operation follows to implement the temporal part of the contrast sensitivity function (CSF).
- CSF contrast sensitivity function
- the results are then converted to measures of visibility by dividing each coefficient by its respective visual spatial threshold.
- the difference of two sequences is subjected to a contrast masking operation, and finally the masked difference is pooled over various dimensions to illustrate perceptual error.
- Winkler's metric consists of colour conversion, temporal filters, spatial subband filters, contrast control, and pooling for various channels, which are based on the spatio-temporal mechanisms in the human visual system.
- the difference of original and decoded video is evaluated to give an estimate of visual quality of the decoded signal.
- the metric's parameters are determined by fitting the metric's output to the experimental data on human eyes.
- Prevalent visual coding schemes e.g., DCT- or wavelet-based introduce specific types of artefacts such as blockiness, ringing and blurring.
- the metrics in such coding may evaluate blocking artefacts as the distortion measure.
- the filter bank used in one proposed model is separable in spatial and temporal directions.
- the model features 17 Gabor spatial filters and 2 temporal filters.
- a non-linear transducer modelling of masking has been utilized.
- the perceptual model is applied to blockiness dominant regions.
- a software tool for measuring the perceptual quality of digital still images has been provided in the market.
- Five proprietary full reference perceptual metrics, namely blockiness, blurriness, noise, stylishness and a mean opinion score have been developed. However, since these methods are proprietary, there are no descriptions available of how these metrics' outputs are being calculated.
- a full reference video quality metric has also been proposed. For each frame, corresponding local areas are extracted from both the original and test video sequences respectively.
- a local correlation quality index value is calculated and these local measures are averaged to give a quality value of the entire frame.
- the frame quality value is adjusted by two factors: the blockiness factor and motion factor.
- the blockiness measurement is evaluated in the power spectrum of the image signal. This blockiness measure is used to adjust the overall quality value only if the frame has relatively high quality index value but severe blockiness.
- the motion measurement is obtained by a simple block-based motion estimation algorithm. This motion adjustment is applied only if a frame simultaneously satisfies the conditions of low quality index value, high blurriness and low blockiness.
- all frame quality index values are averaged to a single overall quality value of the test sequence.
- a method of measuring a quality of a test video stream comprising measuring a content richness fidelity feature of the test video stream based on occurrences of color values in image frames of the test video stream; measuring a block-fidelity feature of the test video stream based on distortion at block-boundaries in the image frames of the test video stream; measuring a distortion-invisibility feature of the test video stream based on distortion at pixels of the image frames of the test video stream; and determining a quality rating for the test video stream based on the content richness fidelity feature, the block- fidelity feature and the distortion-invisibility feature measured.
- the measuring of the content richness fidelity feature of the test video stream may be based on a sum of products for each colour and each frame, wherein each product comprises the product of a probability of occurrence of said each colour in said each image frame, and a logarithmic of said probability.
- the measuring of the block-fidelity feature of the test video stream may be based on distortion at 4-pixel sub-block boundaries.
- the measuring of the content richness fidelity feature may be based on occurrences of color values in corresponding image frames of the test video stream and an original video stream from which the test video stream has been derived.
- the measuring of the block-fidelity feature of the test video stream may be based on distortion at block-boundaries in corresponding image frames of the test video stream and the original video stream from which the test video stream has been derived.
- the measuring of the distortion-invisibility feature of the test video stream may be based on a visibility threshold value.
- the visibility threshold value may be based on one or more masking effects determined for the test video stream and the original video stream.
- the masking effects may comprise one or more of a group consisting of colour masking, temporal masking and spatial-textural masking.
- the measuring of the distortion-invisibility feature of the test video stream is based on distortion at pixels of corresponding image frames of the test video stream and the original video stream from which the test video stream has been derived.
- the measuring of the distortion-invisibility feature of the test video stream is based on processing of current and previous image frames of the test video stream and the original video stream.
- a system for measuring a quality of a test video stream comprising means for measuring a content richness fidelity feature of the test video stream based on occurrences of color values in image frames of the test video stream; means for measuring a block-fidelity feature of the test video stream based on distortion at block-boundaries in the image frames of the test video stream; means for measuring a distortion-invisibility feature of the test video stream based on distortion at pixels of the image frames of the test video stream; and means for determining a quality rating for the test video stream based on the content richness fidelity feature, the block-fidelity feature and the distortion-invisibility feature measured.
- a system for measuring a quality of a test video stream comprising a color processor measuring a content richness fidelity feature of the test video stream based on occurrences of color values in image frames of the test video stream; a distortion processor measuring a block-fidelity feature of the test video stream based on distortion at block-boundaries in the image frames of the test video stream and measuring a distortion-invisibility feature of the test video stream based on distortion at pixels of the image frames of the test video stream; and a quality rating processor determining a quality rating for the test video stream based on the content richness fidelity feature, the block-fidelity feature and the distortion-invisibility feature measured.
- a computer readable data storage medium having stored thereon program code means for instructing a computer to execute a method of measuring a quality of a test video stream, the method comprising measuring a content richness fidelity feature of the test video stream based on occurrences of color values in image frames of the test video stream; measuring a block- fidelity feature of the test video stream based on distortion at block-boundaries in the image frames of the test video stream; measuring a distortion-invisibility feature of the test video stream based on distortion at pixels of the image frames of the test video stream; and determining a quality rating for the test video stream based on the content richness fidelity feature, the block-fidelity feature and the distortion-invisibility feature measured.
- Figure 1 is a schematic drawing illustrating a 7x7 mask utilised in determining the average background luminance around a pixel, in accordance with an example embodiment.
- Figure 2 is a schematic drawing illustrating 7x7 masks utilised in calculating the average luminance around a pixel, according to an example embodiment.
- Figure 3 is a schematic drawing illustrating a 7x7 low-pass filter utilised in reducing the spatial-textural masking at edge locations, in accordance with an example embodiment.
- Figure 4 is a flow-chart illustrating the computing of the block-fidelity feature in an example embodiment.
- Figure 5 is a flow-chart illustrating the computing of the content richness fidelity in an example embodiment.
- Figure 6 is a flow-chart illustrating the process for computing distortion- invisibility in an example embodiment.
- Figure 7 is a schematic drawing of a video quality measurement system, according to an example embodiment.
- Figure 8 is a flow-chart illustrating the process for computing the overall video quality measure in an example embodiment.
- Figure 9 shows a scatterplot of subjective ratings versus ratings obtained using a prior art visual quality metrics.
- Figure 10 shows a scatterplot of subjective ratings versus the video quality ratings obtained in accordance with an example embodiment.
- Figure 11 is a schematic drawing of a computer system for implementing the method and system according to an example embodiment.
- the example embodiment described comprises an objective video quality measurement method to automatically measure the perceived quality of a stream of video images.
- the method is based on a combined measure of distortion-invisibility, block-fidelity, and content richness fidelity.
- the example embodiment seeks to provide an automatic and objective video quality measurement method that is able to emulate the human vision to detect the perceived quality of a video stream.
- video quality is performed via a subjective test where a large number of human subjects are used to gauge the quality of a video but this process is not only time-consuming, but tedious and expensive to perform.
- the example embodiments seek to replace the need of a subjective test in order to be able to gauge the perceived quality of a video stream.
- the example embodiment consists of computation of a video quality rating using a video quality model made up of the following components: (1) content richness fidelity (F RF ), (2) block-fidelity (F BF ), and (3) distortion-invisibility (D).
- the content richness fidelity feature measures the fidelity of the richness of a test video's content with respect to the original (undistorted) reference video. This content richness fidelity feature gives higher values for a test video which has better fidelity in content richness with respect to the original (undistorted) reference video.
- the block-fidelity feature measures the amount of distortion at block- boundaries in the test video when compared with respect to the original (undistorted) reference video.
- the block-fidelity feature should give lower values when distortion at block-boundaries in the test video is more severe and higher values when distortion is very low or does not exist in the test video (when compared to the original (undistorted) reference video).
- the distortion-invisibility feature measures the average amount of distortion that may be visible at each pixel with respect to a visibility threshold and gives higher values for lower visible distortions and lower values for higher visible distortions. A combined measure is proposed and then demonstrated to measure visual quality for video with the video-quality features in the example embodiment.
- the content richness fidelity feature of the example embodiment measures the fidelity of the richness of test video's content with respect to the original reference (undistorted) video.
- This content richness fidelity feature gives higher values for test video which has better fidelity in content richness with respect to the original reference (undistorted) video.
- This feature closely correlates with human perceptual response which tends to assign better subjective ratings to more lively and more stylish images and lower subjective ratings to dull and unlively images.
- the subscript o refers to the original video sequence
- the subscript d refers to the test video sequence
- n is the total number of image-frames in the video sequence
- i is the number of occurrence of / in the image frame
- p(i) is the probability or relative frequency of / appearing in the image frame.
- Figure 5 shows a flow chart of the process involved in computing the content richness fidelity in the example embodiment. At steps 502 and 503, the probability of each colour is determined for the current frame of a reference video and of a test video respectively.
- the product of the probability and the Log of probability for each colour is determined for the reference video and test video respectively.
- the products are summed for the reference video and the test video respectively.
- the negative of the summed products is output for the reference video and the test video respectively.
- the content richness fidelity feature is computed and output.
- the block-fidelity feature of the example embodiment measures the amount of distortion at block-boundaries in the test video when compared with respect to the original reference (undistorted) video.
- the block-fidelity feature should give lower values when distortion at block-boundaries in the test video is more severe and higher values when distortion is very low or does not exist in the test video (when compared to the original reference (undistorted) video).
- the blocking effect, and its propagation through reconstructed video sequences, is one of the significant coding artefacts that often occur in video compression.
- the blocking effect is also a source of a number of other types of reconstruction artifacts, such as stationary area granular noise.
- I(x,y,t) denotes the colour value of the input image frame / at pixel location
- H is the height of the image
- W is the width of the image
- xe[l,W] and y e[l,H] xe[l,W] and y e[l,H] .
- d v (x,y,t) I(x,y + l,t)-I(x,y,t) .
- B h and B v are computed from block boundaries interspaced at 4 pixels apart in horizontal and vertical directions respectively.
- Figure 4 shows a flow chart of computing the block-fidelity feature in the example embodiment.
- steps 402 and 403 the differences in colour values for blocks' boundaries in a first direction are determined for a current frame of the reference video and the test video respectively.
- steps 404 and 405 an average difference for blocks' boundaries in the first direction across a second direction is determined for the reference video and the test video respectively.
- a component for the first direction is determined for the reference video and the test video respectively.
- differences in colour values for blocks' boundaries in th,e second direction are determined for the reference video and the test video respectively.
- an average difference for blocks' boundaries in the second direction across the first direction is determined for the reference video and the test video respectively.
- a component for the second direction is determined for the reference video and the test video respectively.
- the block-fidelity feature is computed and output.
- the distortion-invisibility feature in the example embodiment measures the average amount of distortion that may be visible at each pixel with respect to a visibility threshold and gives higher values for lower visible distortions and lower values for higher visible distortions.
- the distortion-invisibility measure, D(t), for each frame of the video is given by:
- T(x,y,t) ⁇ s the visibility threshold at a particular pixel location (x,y) and time interval t
- W and H are width and height of the video frame respectively
- l ⁇ x ⁇ W , l ⁇ y ⁇ H , ⁇ is included for introducing linearity into the equation, and ⁇ 2 prevents division by zero in the equation.
- d(x,y,t) ⁇ T(x,y,t) otherwise where d(x,y,f) is the difference between a frame in the test video l d and the reference video l 0 at the same pixel location (x,y) and time t and is defined as:
- l 0 (x,y,t) denotes a pixel at location (x,y) at frame t of the original video sequence
- l d (x,y,t) denotes a pixel at location (x,y) at frame t of the test video sequence.
- T(x,y,f) The visibility threshold at a particular pixel located at position (x,y) and time t, denoted T(x,y,f), provides an indication of the maximum allowable distortions at a particular pixel in the image frame which will still not be visible to human eyes.
- f(x,y,t), T(x,y,t) and ⁇ ( .y.f) can be regarded as effects due to colour masking, spatial-textural masking, and temporal masking respectively at a particular pixel located at position (x,y) in the image frame at time interval f in the video sequence, while d s is a constant.
- the three masking effects interact in a manner as described by the above equation in order to provide a visibility threshold required for this objective video quality measurement method.
- Literary, visibility threshold is made up of additive-cum-weak-cancellation interactions of both the colour masking term f and the spatial-textural masking term 7 s (mathematically expressed as
- Masking is an important visual phenomenon and can explain why similar artifacts are disturbing in certain regions (such as flat regions) of an image frame while they are hardly noticeable in other regions (such as textured regions).
- similar artifacts in certain regions of different video sequences displaying different temporal characteristics will appear as disturbing in a particular video sequence but not in another.
- the colour masking attempts to emulate the effect of human vision's characteristic of being able to accept higher video-frame distortion when the background colour is above or below a certain mid-level threshold and can be derived as follow:
- T 0 l , T x and T 2 l , L h r, Vi, and v 2 are constants used to determine the exact profile of the colour masking.
- ⁇ , a 2 , ⁇ 3 , and 04 are constants used to determine the exact profile of the spatial-textural masking.
- m(x,y,f) is the average of the average colour value gu(x,y) in four different orientations and it attempts to capture the textural characteristic of the small local region centred on pixel (x,y,t) and can be mathematically written as: Also, g ⁇ ⁇ (x,y,t) is the average colour value around a pixel located at position (x,y) of a frame in the original reference video sequence at time interval f and is computed by convolving a 7x7 mask, G k with this particular frame in the original reference video sequence.
- b(x,y,t) is the average background colour value around a pixel located at position (x,y) of a frame in the original reference video sequence at time interval t and is computed by convolving a 7x7 mask, B, shown in Figure 1 at numeral 102, with this particular frame in the original reference video sequence.
- W(x,y,t) is an edge-adaptive weight of the pixel at location (x,y) of a frame in the original reference video sequence at time interval t, and it attempts to reduce the spatial-textural masking at edge locations because artifacts that are found on essential edge locations tend to reduce the visual quality of the image frame.
- the corresponding edge-adaptive weight matrix W obtained by convolving
- Figure 6 shows a flow chart illustrating the process for computing distortion- invisibility in the example embodiment.
- steps 602 and 604 colour masking and spatial-textural masking respectively are performed on the current frame of the reference video.
- temporal masking is performed between the current frame of the reference video and the previous frame of the reference video.
- a frame difference is determined between the current frame of the test video and the current frame of the reference video.
- step 610 masking interactions are performed based on V , T, and 7TM from steps 602, 604, and 606 to produce a visibility threshold T.
- step 612 the distortion-invisibility D is computed based on an output from the masking interactions step 610 and of from the frame difference determination step 608, and the distortion-invisibility D is output.
- Figure 7 shows a block diagram of the video quality measurement system 700 of the example embodiment.
- the system 700 comprises a block-fidelity feature extraction module 702, a content richness fidelity feature extraction module 704, a distortion-invisibility feature extraction module 706, and a video quality model module 708.
- the current frame of the test video is input to each of the modules 702, 704 and 706.
- the current frame of the reference video is input to each of the modules 702, 704 and 706.
- the previous frame of the reference video is input to module 206.
- video quality module 208 a video quality measure of the current frame is generated and output, based on the respective outputs of modules 702, 704 and
- Figure 8 shows a flow chart illustrating the process for computing the overall video quality measure for a test video sequence in the example embodiment.
- the test video sequence of images is input.
- a counter i is set to zero.
- the counter i is incremented by one.
- the content richness fidelity is determined as previously described with reference to Figure 5.
- the block-fidelity is determined as previously described with reference to Figure 4.
- the distortion-invisibility is determined as previously described with reference to Figure 6.
- the video quality measure is determined for frame i, as previously described with reference to Figure 7.
- METRIC PARAMETERIZATION This step is used to derive the values of the various parameters being used in the video quality measurement model in the example embodiment.
- the parameters of the video quality measurement model in the example embodiment have been obtained by optimising them with respect to their correlation with human visual subjective ratings.
- the parameters' optimization method used is a modified version of the Hooke & Jeeves' pattern search method, due to its robustness, simplicity and efficiency.
- the algorithm performs well in curve fitting and linear equations solving and has been successfully applied to many applications.
- Application of Pattern Search Strategy Hooke & Jeeve's method has been used here due to its use of simple strategy rather than complex tactics. It makes two types of move: exploratory moves and pattern moves.
- Each point with success is termed as ibase point. So the process proceeds from base point to base point.
- An exploratory move is designed to acquire knowledge concerning the local behaviour of the objective function. This knowledge is inferred entirely from the success or failure of the exploratory moves and utilized by combining it into a 'pattern', which indicates a probable direction for a successful move.
- the exploratory moves here are taken to be simple, that is, at each move only the value of a single coordinate is changed.
- a pattern move is designed to utilize the information acquired in the previous exploratory moves, and accomplish the minimization of the objective function by moving in the direction of the established 'pattern'. On the intuitive basis, the pattern move from the base point duplicates the combined moves from the previous base point.
- a sequence of exploratory moves then follows and may result in a success or a failure.
- the final point reached becomes a new base point and a further pattern is conducted.
- the length of the pattern move may reach many times of the size of the base step.
- the pattern move is abandoned.
- another series of exploratory moves are made in order to establish an entirely new pattern.
- the search will reach an impasse when no more new base point is found.
- the step size can be reduced to continue the search but should be kept above a practical limit imposed by the application.
- the exploratory moves will be stopped when the step size is sufficiently small, and the final termination of the search is made when no more base point to be found, or the optimization result is good enough.
- the parameters of the video quality measurement model in the example embodiment have been obtained by optimising them with respect to their correlation with human visual subjective ratings.
- the correlation measure used in the optimisation is selected to be Pearson correlation of the logistic fit.
- Table 1 summarizes the test conditions for the original video sequences. Each of the video sequences consists of 250 frames.
- the parameters of visibility threshold, luminance and spatial-textural masking namely d s , f s , T 0 m , TTM , T 2 m , T 3 m , z 1t z 2 , a , a 2 , a 3 , and o , have been optimised.
- the temporal masking parameters namely T 0 ' , r and T 2 , r, v-,, and v 2 , are then optimised (using the already optimised parameters obtained in the first step). Finally, the above process is repeated again to ensure that the final optimised parameters estimated are indeed the best parameters obtainable.
- the video quality measurement method in the example embodiment has been tested on the test data set consisting of 90 video sequences that have been obtained by subjecting 12 original video sequences to various compression bitrates and frame rates (see Table 1).
- the performance of the proposed metric is measured with respect to the subjective ratings of these test video sequences that have been obtained by subjective video quality experiment.
- the test video sequences are generated by subjecting 12 different original undistorted CIF (Common Intermediate Format) and QCIF (Quarter Common Intermediate Format) video sequences ("Container”, "Coast Guard”, “Japan League”, “Foreman”, “News”, and “Tempete") to H.26L video compression with different bit rates and frame rates.
- Table 2 shows the results of the proposed method with respect to PSNR. The upper bound and lower bound of Pearson correlation were obtained with a confidence interval of 95%.
- Figure 9 shows the scatterplot 902 of subjective ratings (y-axis) versus the rating values obtain using a prior art visual quality metric, more particular PSNR values(x-axis), while Figure 10 shows the scatterplot of subjective ratings (y-axis) versus the video quality ratings (x-axis) estimated utilising the video quality measurement method of an example embodiment of the present invention.
- the middle solid lines (904, 1004) portrays the logistic fit using the above-mentioned 4-parameter cubic polynomial, while the upper dotted curves (906, 1006) and the lower dotted curves (908, 1008) portray the upper bound and lower bound respectively obtained with a confidence interval of 95%.
- the method and system of the example embodiment can be implemented on a computer system 1100, schematically shown in Figure 11. It may be implemented as software, such as a computer program being executed within the computer system 1100, and instructing the computer system 1100 to conduct the method of the example embodiment.
- the computer system 1100 comprises a computer module 1102, input modules such as a keyboard 1104 and mouse 1106 and a plurality of output devices such as a display 1108, and printer 1110.
- the computer module 1102 is connected to a computer network 1112 via a suitable transceiver device 1114, to enable access to e.g. the Internet or other network systems such as Local Area Network (LAN) or Wide Area Network (WAN).
- LAN Local Area Network
- WAN Wide Area Network
- the computer module 1102 in the example includes a processor 1118, a
- RAM Random Access Memory
- ROM Read Only Memory
- the computer module 1102 also includes a number of Input/Output (I/O) interfaces, for example I/O interface 1124 to the display 1108, and I/O interface 1126 to the keyboard 1104.
- I/O Input/Output
- the components of the computer module 1102 typically communicate via an interconnected bus 1128 and in a manner known to the person skilled in the relevant art.
- the application program is typically supplied to the user of the computer system 1100 encoded on a data storage medium such as a CD-ROM or floppy disk and read utilising a corresponding data storage medium drive of a data storage device 1130.
- the application program is read and controlled in its execution by the processor 1118.
- Intermediate storage of program data maybe accomplished using RAM 1120.
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Multimedia (AREA)
- Signal Processing (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Biomedical Technology (AREA)
- General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Testing, Inspecting, Measuring Of Stereoscopic Televisions And Televisions (AREA)
- Image Analysis (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US10/581,579 US7733372B2 (en) | 2003-12-02 | 2004-12-02 | Method and system for video quality measurements |
EP04801745A EP1692876B1 (en) | 2003-12-02 | 2004-12-02 | Method and system for video quality measurements |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US52624903P | 2003-12-02 | 2003-12-02 | |
US60/526,249 | 2003-12-02 |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
WO2005055618A1 true WO2005055618A1 (en) | 2005-06-16 |
Family
ID=34652433
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/SG2004/000393 WO2005055618A1 (en) | 2003-12-02 | 2004-12-02 | Method and system for video quality measurements |
Country Status (5)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US7733372B2 (en) |
EP (1) | EP1692876B1 (en) |
MY (1) | MY136664A (en) |
TW (1) | TWI358941B (en) |
WO (1) | WO2005055618A1 (en) |
Cited By (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP1739981A2 (en) * | 2005-06-29 | 2007-01-03 | NTT DoCoMo INC. | Video evaluation apparatus, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing aparatus, video evaluation method, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing method, video evaluation program, and spatio-temporal frequency analyzing program |
WO2008106994A1 (en) * | 2007-03-07 | 2008-09-12 | Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der angewandten Forschung e.V. | Concept for determining a video quality measure for block coded images |
EP2003615A1 (en) * | 2007-06-12 | 2008-12-17 | Siemens Building Technologies Fire & Security Products GmbH & Co. oHG | Method and device for automatic assessment of the image quality of video images |
FR2943879A1 (en) * | 2009-03-30 | 2010-10-01 | Univ Nantes | METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR EVALUATING THE VISUAL QUALITY OF AN IMAGE OR IMAGE SEQUENCE USING OBJECTIVE INDICATORS AND CORRESPONDING COMPUTER PROGRAM. |
US7929764B2 (en) | 2007-06-15 | 2011-04-19 | Microsoft Corporation | Identifying character information in media content |
ITMI20120364A1 (en) * | 2012-03-08 | 2013-09-09 | Palo Leonardo De | AUTOMATIC SYSTEM FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF THE LOYALTY OF VIDEO REPRODUCTION IN REAL TIME. |
US8836929B2 (en) | 2002-12-20 | 2014-09-16 | Carl Zeiss Smt Gmbh | Device and method for the optical measurement of an optical system by using an immersion fluid |
CN110429954A (en) * | 2019-07-12 | 2019-11-08 | 厦门大学 | A kind of transform domain underwater acoustic communication method based on chaos spread spectrum |
CN113794874A (en) * | 2021-11-15 | 2021-12-14 | 南京理工大学紫金学院 | Quality evaluation method for videos shot by multiple cameras |
Families Citing this family (29)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB2419763A (en) * | 2004-11-01 | 2006-05-03 | Sony Uk Ltd | Image watermarking using weighted code word coefficients |
WO2006118559A1 (en) * | 2005-04-29 | 2006-11-09 | Chubb International Holdings Limited | Automatic video quality monitoring for surveillance cameras |
US8369417B2 (en) * | 2006-05-19 | 2013-02-05 | The Hong Kong University Of Science And Technology | Optimal denoising for video coding |
US8831111B2 (en) * | 2006-05-19 | 2014-09-09 | The Hong Kong University Of Science And Technology | Decoding with embedded denoising |
CN102317974B (en) | 2009-02-12 | 2014-08-06 | 杜比实验室特许公司 | Quality evaluation of sequences of images |
US8310548B2 (en) * | 2009-10-23 | 2012-11-13 | Contec Llc | System and method for video quality parametric tests |
US9401813B2 (en) * | 2009-12-29 | 2016-07-26 | Iheartmedia Management Services, Inc. | Media stream monitor |
US8559511B2 (en) | 2010-03-30 | 2013-10-15 | Hong Kong Applied Science and Technology Research Institute Company Limited | Method and apparatus for video coding by ABT-based just noticeable difference model |
EP2561684A1 (en) | 2010-04-19 | 2013-02-27 | Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation | Quality assessment of high dynamic range, visual dynamic range and wide color gamut image and video |
US8494283B2 (en) * | 2010-12-21 | 2013-07-23 | Microsoft Corporation | Image quality assessment |
US8581987B1 (en) * | 2011-03-21 | 2013-11-12 | Marvell International Ltd. | Systems and methods for evaluating video quality |
US8743291B2 (en) | 2011-04-12 | 2014-06-03 | Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation | Quality assessment for images that have extended dynamic ranges or wide color gamuts |
GB2497915B (en) * | 2011-10-25 | 2015-09-09 | Skype | Estimating quality of a video signal |
JP2013097463A (en) * | 2011-10-28 | 2013-05-20 | Sony Corp | Image evaluation device, image evaluation method and program |
KR20140101745A (en) | 2011-11-28 | 2014-08-20 | 톰슨 라이센싱 | Video quality measurement considering multiple artifacts |
US9014279B2 (en) | 2011-12-10 | 2015-04-21 | Avigdor Steinberg | Method, system and apparatus for enhanced video transcoding |
US8768089B2 (en) * | 2012-03-23 | 2014-07-01 | Futurewei Technologies, Inc. | System and method for filtering an image |
CN102740114B (en) * | 2012-07-16 | 2016-12-21 | 公安部第三研究所 | A kind of nothing ginseng appraisal procedure of Subjective video quality |
US10007977B2 (en) * | 2015-05-11 | 2018-06-26 | Netflix, Inc. | Techniques for predicting perceptual video quality |
CN105049838B (en) * | 2015-07-10 | 2017-05-10 | 天津大学 | Objective evaluation method for compressing stereoscopic video quality |
US9693063B2 (en) * | 2015-09-21 | 2017-06-27 | Sling Media Pvt Ltd. | Video analyzer |
US9749686B2 (en) | 2015-09-21 | 2017-08-29 | Sling Media Pvt Ltd. | Video analyzer |
US10133934B2 (en) * | 2015-09-30 | 2018-11-20 | Apple Inc. | Systems and methods for post processing time-lapse videos |
US10185884B2 (en) * | 2016-09-07 | 2019-01-22 | Apple Inc. | Multi-dimensional objective metric concentering |
US10798387B2 (en) | 2016-12-12 | 2020-10-06 | Netflix, Inc. | Source-consistent techniques for predicting absolute perceptual video quality |
CN113518227B (en) * | 2020-04-09 | 2023-02-10 | 于江鸿 | Data processing method and system |
US11568527B2 (en) * | 2020-09-24 | 2023-01-31 | Ati Technologies Ulc | Video quality assessment using aggregated quality values |
US11917327B2 (en) * | 2021-06-25 | 2024-02-27 | Istreamplanet Co., Llc | Dynamic resolution switching in live streams based on video quality assessment |
CN114666634B (en) * | 2022-03-21 | 2024-03-19 | 北京达佳互联信息技术有限公司 | Picture quality detection result display method, device, equipment and storage medium |
Citations (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5446492A (en) * | 1993-01-19 | 1995-08-29 | Wolf; Stephen | Perception-based video quality measurement system |
US5818520A (en) * | 1996-02-12 | 1998-10-06 | Tektronix, Inc. | Programmable instrument for automatic measurement of compressed video quality |
US6246435B1 (en) * | 1998-09-08 | 2001-06-12 | Tektronix, Inc. | In-service realtime picture quality analysis |
US20030086001A1 (en) * | 2001-04-17 | 2003-05-08 | General Instrument Corporation | Methods and apparatus for the measurement of video quality |
Family Cites Families (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US6075884A (en) * | 1996-03-29 | 2000-06-13 | Sarnoff Corporation | Method and apparatus for training a neural network to learn and use fidelity metric as a control mechanism |
US6285797B1 (en) * | 1999-04-13 | 2001-09-04 | Sarnoff Corporation | Method and apparatus for estimating digital video quality without using a reference video |
US20040190633A1 (en) * | 2001-05-01 | 2004-09-30 | Walid Ali | Composite objective video quality measurement |
US7170933B2 (en) * | 2002-12-13 | 2007-01-30 | International Business Machines Corporation | Method and system for objective quality assessment of image and video streams |
SG147459A1 (en) * | 2003-12-16 | 2008-11-28 | Agency Science Tech & Res | Image and video quality measurement |
-
2004
- 2004-12-02 WO PCT/SG2004/000393 patent/WO2005055618A1/en active Application Filing
- 2004-12-02 US US10/581,579 patent/US7733372B2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 2004-12-02 EP EP04801745A patent/EP1692876B1/en not_active Not-in-force
- 2004-12-02 TW TW093137282A patent/TWI358941B/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 2004-12-02 MY MYPI20045036A patent/MY136664A/en unknown
Patent Citations (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5446492A (en) * | 1993-01-19 | 1995-08-29 | Wolf; Stephen | Perception-based video quality measurement system |
US5818520A (en) * | 1996-02-12 | 1998-10-06 | Tektronix, Inc. | Programmable instrument for automatic measurement of compressed video quality |
US6246435B1 (en) * | 1998-09-08 | 2001-06-12 | Tektronix, Inc. | In-service realtime picture quality analysis |
US20030086001A1 (en) * | 2001-04-17 | 2003-05-08 | General Instrument Corporation | Methods and apparatus for the measurement of video quality |
Cited By (14)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US8836929B2 (en) | 2002-12-20 | 2014-09-16 | Carl Zeiss Smt Gmbh | Device and method for the optical measurement of an optical system by using an immersion fluid |
US8064638B2 (en) | 2005-06-29 | 2011-11-22 | Ntt Docomo, Inc. | Video evaluation apparatus, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing apparatus, video evaluation method, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing method, video evaluation program, and spatio-temporal frequency analyzing program |
EP1739981A3 (en) * | 2005-06-29 | 2009-05-06 | NTT DoCoMo INC. | Video evaluation apparatus, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing apparatus, video evaluation method, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing method, video evaluation program, and spatio-temporal frequency analyzing program |
US8462985B2 (en) | 2005-06-29 | 2013-06-11 | Ntt Docomo, Inc. | Video evaluation apparatus, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing apparatus, video evaluation method, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing method, video evaluation program, and spatio-temporal frequency analyzing program |
EP1739981A2 (en) * | 2005-06-29 | 2007-01-03 | NTT DoCoMo INC. | Video evaluation apparatus, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing aparatus, video evaluation method, spatio-temporal frequency analyzing method, video evaluation program, and spatio-temporal frequency analyzing program |
WO2008106994A1 (en) * | 2007-03-07 | 2008-09-12 | Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der angewandten Forschung e.V. | Concept for determining a video quality measure for block coded images |
EP2003615A1 (en) * | 2007-06-12 | 2008-12-17 | Siemens Building Technologies Fire & Security Products GmbH & Co. oHG | Method and device for automatic assessment of the image quality of video images |
US7929764B2 (en) | 2007-06-15 | 2011-04-19 | Microsoft Corporation | Identifying character information in media content |
WO2010112472A1 (en) * | 2009-03-30 | 2010-10-07 | Universite De Nantes | Method and device for assessing the visual quality of an image or a sequence of images using objective indicators, and corresponding computer program |
FR2943879A1 (en) * | 2009-03-30 | 2010-10-01 | Univ Nantes | METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR EVALUATING THE VISUAL QUALITY OF AN IMAGE OR IMAGE SEQUENCE USING OBJECTIVE INDICATORS AND CORRESPONDING COMPUTER PROGRAM. |
ITMI20120364A1 (en) * | 2012-03-08 | 2013-09-09 | Palo Leonardo De | AUTOMATIC SYSTEM FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF THE LOYALTY OF VIDEO REPRODUCTION IN REAL TIME. |
CN110429954A (en) * | 2019-07-12 | 2019-11-08 | 厦门大学 | A kind of transform domain underwater acoustic communication method based on chaos spread spectrum |
CN113794874A (en) * | 2021-11-15 | 2021-12-14 | 南京理工大学紫金学院 | Quality evaluation method for videos shot by multiple cameras |
CN113794874B (en) * | 2021-11-15 | 2022-02-01 | 南京理工大学紫金学院 | Quality evaluation method for videos shot by multiple cameras |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
US7733372B2 (en) | 2010-06-08 |
TW200534698A (en) | 2005-10-16 |
US20070257988A1 (en) | 2007-11-08 |
EP1692876B1 (en) | 2012-04-25 |
EP1692876A4 (en) | 2008-09-03 |
TWI358941B (en) | 2012-02-21 |
EP1692876A1 (en) | 2006-08-23 |
MY136664A (en) | 2008-11-28 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
US7733372B2 (en) | Method and system for video quality measurements | |
Liu et al. | Efficient DCT-domain blind measurement and reduction of blocking artifacts | |
Caviedes et al. | No-reference quality metric for degraded and enhanced video | |
KR100782843B1 (en) | A video quality adaptive coding artifact reduction system | |
US7860167B2 (en) | Apparatus and method for adaptive 3D artifact reducing for encoded image signal | |
US7038710B2 (en) | Method and apparatus for measuring the quality of video data | |
Averbuch et al. | Deblocking of block-transform compressed images using weighted sums of symmetrically aligned pixels | |
Liu et al. | A perceptually relevant no-reference blockiness metric based on local image characteristics | |
Moorthy et al. | Efficient motion weighted spatio-temporal video SSIM index | |
Masry et al. | A metric for continuous quality evaluation of compressed video with severe distortions | |
Ma et al. | Reduced-reference video quality assessment of compressed video sequences | |
Tai et al. | Deblocking filter for low bit rate MPEG-4 video | |
US20040156559A1 (en) | Method and apparatus for measuring quality of compressed video sequences without references | |
JP2008508751A5 (en) | ||
JP2002238049A (en) | Method for coding artifact reduction | |
Chetouani et al. | A novel free reference image quality metric using neural network approach | |
Yeh et al. | Post-processing deblocking filter algorithm for various video decoders | |
Chen et al. | Design a deblocking filter with three separate modes in DCT-based coding | |
Zhang et al. | Quality assessment methods for perceptual video compression | |
Atzori et al. | Adaptive anisotropic filtering (AAF) for real-time visual enhancement of MPEG-coded video sequences | |
Chen et al. | Artifact reduction by post-processing in image compression | |
JP4033292B2 (en) | Quantization control method for video coding | |
Del Corso et al. | MNR: A novel approach to correct MPEG temporal distortions | |
JP2002199418A (en) | Method for rating quality of picture | |
Klima et al. | Image quality and QoE in multimedia systems |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
AK | Designated states |
Kind code of ref document: A1 Designated state(s): AE AG AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BW BY BZ CA CH CN CO CR CU CZ DE DK DM DZ EC EE EG ES FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MA MD MG MK MN MW MX MZ NA NI NO NZ OM PG PH PL PT RO RU SC SD SE SG SK SL SY TJ TM TN TR TT TZ UA UG US UZ VC VN YU ZA ZM ZW |
|
AL | Designated countries for regional patents |
Kind code of ref document: A1 Designated state(s): BW GH GM KE LS MW MZ NA SD SL SZ TZ UG ZM ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HU IE IS IT LT LU MC NL PL PT RO SE SI SK TR BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GQ GW ML MR NE SN TD TG |
|
NENP | Non-entry into the national phase |
Ref country code: DE |
|
WWW | Wipo information: withdrawn in national office |
Country of ref document: DE |
|
WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 2004801745 Country of ref document: EP |
|
WWP | Wipo information: published in national office |
Ref document number: 2004801745 Country of ref document: EP |
|
WWE | Wipo information: entry into national phase |
Ref document number: 10581579 Country of ref document: US |
|
WWP | Wipo information: published in national office |
Ref document number: 10581579 Country of ref document: US |