Objective quality assessment of MPEG-2 video streams by using CBP neural networks | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

Objective quality assessment of MPEG-2 video streams by using CBP neural networks


Abstract:

The increasing use of compression standards in broadcasting digital TV has raised the need for established criteria to measure perceived quality. Novel methods must take ...Show More

Abstract:

The increasing use of compression standards in broadcasting digital TV has raised the need for established criteria to measure perceived quality. Novel methods must take into account the specific artifacts introduced by digital compression techniques. This paper presents a methodology using circular backpropagation (CBP) neural networks for the objective quality assessment of motion picture expert group (MPEG) video streams. Objective features are continuously extracted from compressed video streams on a frame-by-frame basis; they feed the CBP network estimating the corresponding perceived quality. The resulting adaptive modeling of subjective perception supports a real-time system for monitoring displayed video quality. The overall system mimics perception but does not require an analytical model of the underlying physical phenomenon. The ability to process compressed video streams represents a crucial advantage over existing approaches, as avoiding the decoding process greatly enhances the system's real-time performance. Experimental evidence confirmed the approach validity. The system was tested on real test videos; they included different contents ranging from fiction to sport. The neural model provided a satisfactory, continuous-time approximation for actual scoring curves, which was validated statistically in terms of confidence analysis. As expected, videos with slow-varying contents such as fiction featured the best performances.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks ( Volume: 13, Issue: 4, July 2002)
Page(s): 939 - 947
Date of Publication: 31 July 2002

ISSN Information:

PubMed ID: 18244489
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I. Introduction

The recent increasing success of digital TV has stimulated the research for objective automated methods to assess the user-end perception of broadcasting. The underlying technical problem is to estimate the effects of the visual artifacts brought about by digital encoding. In this sense, traditional techniques for analog data processing often prove ineffective in measuring the perceived quality of a digital compressed video.

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