Showing posts with label networked media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label networked media. Show all posts

Monday, September 4, 2017

MPEG news: a report from the 119th meeting, Turin, Italy

The original blog post can be found at the Bitmovin Techblog and has been updated here to focus on and highlight research aspects. Additionally, this version of the blog post will be also posted at ACM SIGMM Records.


The MPEG press release comprises the following topics:
  • Evidence of New Developments in Video Compression Coding
  • Call for Evidence on Transcoding for Network Distributed Video Coding
  • 2nd Edition of Storage of Sample Variants reaches Committee Draft
  • New Technical Report on Signalling, Backward Compatibility and Display Adaptation for HDR/WCG Video Coding
  • Draft Requirements for Hybrid Natural/Synthetic Scene Data Container

Evidence of New Developments in Video Compression Coding

At the 119th MPEG meeting, responses to the previously issued call for evidence have been evaluated and they have all successfully demonstrated evidence. The call requested responses for use cases of video coding technology in three categories:
  • standard dynamic range (SDR) — two responses;
  • high dynamic range (HDR) — two responses; and
  • 360° omnidirectional video — four responses.
The evaluation of the responses included subjective testing and an assessment of the performance of the “Joint Exploration Model” (JEM).

The results indicate significant gains over HEVC for a considerable number of test cases with comparable subjective quality at 40-50% less bit rate compared to HEVC for the SDR and HDR test cases with some positive outliers (i.e., higher bit rate savings). Thus, the MPEG-VCEG Joint Video Exploration Team (JVET) concluded that evidence exists of compression technology that may significantly outperform HEVC after further development to establish a new standard. As a next step, the plan is to issue a call for proposals at 120th MPEG meeting (October 2017) and responses expected to be evaluated at the 122th MPEG meeting (April 2018).

We already witness an increase of research articles addressing video coding technologies with capabilities beyond HEVC which will further increase in the future. The main driving force is over the top (OTT) delivery which calls for more efficient bandwidth utilization. However, competition is also increasing with the emergence of AV1 of AOMedia and we may observe also an increasing number of articles in that direction including evaluations thereof. An interesting aspect is also that the number of use cases is also increasing (e.g., see different categories above), which adds further challenges to the "complex video problem".

Call for Evidence on Transcoding for Network Distributed Video Coding

The call for evidence on transcoding for network distributed video coding targets interested parties possessing technology providing transcoding of video at lower computational complexity than transcoding done using a full re-encode. The primary application is adaptive bitrate streaming where a highest bitrate stream is transcoded into lower bitrate streams. It is expected that responses may use “side streams” (or side information, some may call it metadata) accompanying the highest bitrate stream to assist in the transcoding process. MPEG expects submissions for the 120th MPEG meeting where compression efficiency and computational complexity will be assessed.

Transcoding has been discussed already for a long time and I can certainly recommend this article from 2005 published in the Proceedings of the IEEE. The question is, what is different now, 12 years later, and what metadata (or side streams/information) is required for interoperability among different vendors (if any)?

A Brief Overview of Remaining Topics...

  • The 2nd edition of storage of sample variants reaches Committee Draft and expands its usage to MPEG-2 transport stream whereas the first edition primarily focused on ISO base media file format.
  • The new technical report for high dynamic range (HDR) and wide colour gamut (WCG) video coding comprises a survey of various signaling mechanisms including backward compatibility and display adaptation.
  • MPEG issues draft requirements for a scene representation media container enabling the interchange of content for authoring and rendering rich immersive experiences which is currently referred to as hybrid natural/synthetic scene (HNSS) data container.

Other MPEG (Systems) Activities at the 119th Meeting

DASH is in fully maintenance mode as only minor enhancements/corrections have been discussed including contributions to conformance and reference software. The omnidirectional media format (OMAF) is certainly the hottest topic within MPEG systems which is actually between two stages (i.e., between DIS and FDIS) and, thus, a study of DIS has been approved and national bodies are kindly requested to take this into account when casting their votes (incl. comments). The study of DIS comprises format definitions with respect to coding and storage of omnidirectional media including audio and video (aka 360°). The common media application format (CMAF) has been ratified at the last meeting and awaits publications by ISO. In the meantime CMAF is focusing on conformance and reference software as well as amendments regarding various media profiles. Finally, requirements for a multi-image application format (MiAF) are available since the last meeting and at the 119th MPEG meeting a work draft has been approved. MiAF will be based on HEIF and the goal is to define additional constraints to simplify its file format options.

We have successfully demonstrated live 360 adaptive streaming as described here but we expect various improvements from standards available and under development of MPEG. Research aspects in these areas are certainly interesting in the area of performance gains and evaluations with respect to bandwidth efficiency in open networks as well as how these standardization efforts could be used to enable new use cases. 

Publicly available documents from the 119th MPEG meeting can be found here (scroll down to the end of the page). The next MPEG meeting will be held in Macau, China, October 23-27, 2017. Feel free to contact me for any questions or comments.

Thursday, June 26, 2014

VideoNext: Design, Quality and Deployment of Adaptive Video Streaming


The workshop co-located with CoNEXT 2014
December 2, 2014
Sydney, Australia

Submission deadline changed: August 29, 2014 (no further extensions)

Call for Papers

As we continue to develop our ability to generate, process, and display video at increasingly higher quality, we confront the challenge of streaming the same video to the end user. Device heterogeneity in terms of size and processing capabilities combined with the lack of timing guarantees of packet switching networks is forcing the industry to adopt streaming solutions capable of dynamically adapting the video quality in response to resource variability in the end-to-end transport chain. For example, many vendors and providers are already trialing their own proprietary adaptive video streaming platforms while MPEG has recently ratified a standard, called Dynamic Adaptive Streaming over HTTP (DASH), to facilitate widespread deployment of such technology. However, how to best adapt the video to ensure highest user quality of experience while consuming the minimum network resources poses many fundamental challenges, which is attracting the attention of researchers from both academia and industry. The goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers and developers working on all aspects of adaptive video streaming with special emphasis on innovative concepts backed up by experimental evidence.

Specific areas of interest include, but are not limited to:
  • New metrics for measuring user quality of experience (QoE) for adaptive video streaming
  • Solutions for improving streaming QoE for high-speed user mobility
  • Analysis, modelling, and experimentation of DASH
  • Exploitation of user contexts for improving efficiency of adaptive streaming
  • Big data analytics to assess viewer experience of adaptive video
  • Efficient and fair bandwidth sharing techniques for bottleneck links supporting multiple adaptive video streams
  • Network functions to assist and improve adaptive video streaming
  • Synchronization issues in adaptive video streaming (inter-media, inter-device/destination)
  • Methods for effective simulation or emulation of large scale adaptive video streaming platforms
  • Cloud-assisted adaptive video streaming including encoding, transcoding, and adaptation in general
  • Attack scenarios and solutions for adaptive video streaming
  • Energy-efficient adaptive streaming for resource-constraint mobile devices
  • Reproducible research in adaptive video streaming: datasets, evaluation methods, benchmarking, standardization efforts, open source tools
  • Novel use cases and applications in the area of adaptive video streaming

The workshop is considered an integral part of the CoNEXT 2014 conference. All workshop papers will be published in the same set of proceedings as the main conference, and available on the ACM Digital Library. Publication at this workshop is not intended to preclude later publication of an extended version of the paper. At least one author of each accepted papers is expected to present his/her paper at the workshop.

Instructions for Authors

A submission must be no greater than 6 pages in length including all figures, tables, references, appendices, etc., and must be a PDF file of less than 10MB. The review process is single-blind.

Follow the same formatting guidelines as the CoNEXT conference, except VideoNext has a 6 page limit and a 10MB file size limit. See the “Formatting Guidelines” section. Submissions that deviate from these guidelines will be rejected without consideration.

Then use the paper submission site to submit your paper by 8:59 pm Pacific Standard Time (PDT), August 29, 2014.
Important dates
  • Paper Submission: August 2229, 2014 20:59 PDT
  • Notification of Acceptance: September 30, 2014
  • Camera-ready Papers Due: October 24, 2014
  • Workshop: December 2, 2014

TPC co-chairs
  • Mahbub Hassan, University of New South Wales, Australia
  • Ali C. Begen, Cisco Canada
  • Christian Timmerer, Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt, Austria

Technical Program Committee
  • Alexander Raake, Deutsche Telecom Labs, Germany
  • Carsten Griwodz, University of Oslo/Simula, Sweden
  • Chao Chen, Qualcom, USA
  • Colin Perkins, University of Glasgow, Scotland
  • Constantine Dovrolis, Georgia Tech, USA
  • Grenville Armitage, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
  • Imed Bouazizi, Samsung
  • Kuan-Ta Chen, Academia Sinica
  • Magda El Zarki, University of California Irvine, USA
  • Manzur Murshed, Federation University Australia, Australia
  • Pal Halvorsen, University of Oslo/Simula
  • Polychronis Koutsakis, Technical University of Crete, Greece
  • Roger Zimmerman, National University of Singapore, Singapore
  • Saverio Mascolo, University of Bari, Italy
  • Shervin Shirmohammadi ,University of Ottawa, Canada
  • Victor Leung, University of British Columbia, Canada

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

VISNET II NoE SUMMER SCHOOL for NETWORKED AUDIOVISUAL MEDIA TECHNOLOGIES

-- Koc University, Turkey --

http://www.visnet-noe.org/html/summerschool.html

15-19 June 2009, Istanbul, Turkey

Application deadline: 5 June 2009 (Friday)
================================================
INTRODUCTION

We are pleased to announce VISNET II Network of Excellence (NoE) Summer
School for networked audiovisual media technologies. VISNET II is one of
the leading FP6 NoEs in the EU's Networked Audio Visual Systems and Home
Platforms (NAVSHP), which has been running for two and a half years.
VISNET as a consortium has been researching leading edge innovative
ideas in advanced video coding, image/audio processing, networking, and
content security and adaptation areas. In collaboration with Koc
University, which is one of the leading technological universities in
Turkey, this summer school will present the latest work conducted in
VISNET II. This will encourage further collaboration and integration
amongst the participating research students, and post-doc researchers,
as well as academics.

PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS:

* Advanced Video Coding

* Speech and Audio Processing

* 2D Image/Video Processing

* 3D Image/Video Processing

* Media QoS Over Heterogeneous Networks

* Content Adaptation

* Secure Content Management and Distribution

* Media Networking


LECTURERS:

Large number of expert speakers from VISNET II will be lecturing during
the summer school including Prof A. Kondoz (UniS, England), Prof P.
Eisert, (HHI, Germany), Prof F. Pereira (IST, Portugal), Prof T.
Ebrahimi (EPFL, Switzerland), Prof T. Sikora (TUB, Germany), Prof F.
Tarrés (UPF, Spain), Prof J. Delgado (UPC, Spain), Prof W. Skarbek (IPW,
Poland), Dr M. T. Andrade (INESC Porto, Portugal) and many more. Please
see the link below for the full list of our speakers:

http://www.visnet-noe.org/html/summerschool_prog.html

APPLICATION PROCEDURE:

We welcome applicants from anywhere in the world. Summer school is
mainly addressed for graduate students (Masters and PhD). Each
participant is required to register to the summer school by the
registration deadline:

http://www.visnet-noe.org/html/summerschool_mail.html

More details available at:

http://www.visnet-noe.org/html/summerschool.html

CONTACT: visnet2.summerschool@surrey.ac.uk
<mailto:visnet2.summerschool@surrey.ac.uk>

VENUE:

Lectures will be held at the Engineering Auditorium of the Koc
University, which has seating capacity for 250 people, with state of the
art multimedia presentation facilities.

Koc University is 38km from the Istanbul Ataturk Airport. We recommend
people to take a taxi. Taxi ride will take 45 minutes and will cost
about 30 Euros. There is no charge for additional passengers, so people
are encouraged to share a ride.More details available at:

http://www.ku.edu.tr/


ACCOMMODATION AND SOCIAL EVENTS:

Students can stay at Koc University dormitory. The dorms have 2 bed and
4 bed rooms.

www.ku.edu.tr <http://www.ku.edu.tr/>

For reservations, contact:

Elif Elmaci

eelmaci@ku.edu.tr

+90 212 338 3745

Full service hotel rooms available at:

Fuat Pasa Hotel (+90 212 242 9860), which is about 10 minutes ride.

www.fuatpasa.com.tr <http://www.fuatpasa.com.tr/>

street view: single 50 euro, double 60 Euro

Bosphorus view: single 75 Euro, double 90 Euro (prices include
breakfast)

CALENDAR:

Registration deadline: 5 June 2009

Summer School: 15 - 19 June 2009

COST:

Please note that there is no charge for attending the VISNET II NoE
Summer School. However, it is requested that all participants should
register using the registration link above.