Showing posts with label qomex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label qomex. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2022

QoMEX’22: 14th International Conference on Quality of Multimedia Experience

Call For Papers

QoMEX’22

14th International Conference on Quality of Multimedia Experience

September 5.-7. 2022 – Lippstadt, Germany

Full Paper Submission: March 31, 2022

https://qomex2022.itec.aau.at/


The 14th International Conference on Quality of Multimedia Experience will be held from September 5th to 7th, 2022 in Lippstadt, Germany. It will bring together leading experts from academia and industry to present and discuss current and future research on multimedia quality, quality of experience (QoE) and user experience (UX). This way, it will contribute to excellence in developing multimedia technology, towards user well-being, and it will foster the exchange between multidisciplinary communities.

The QoMEX 2022 team solicits contributions including but not limited to topics:

  • Immersive experiences and technologies
  • QoE, Big Data and Artificial Intelligence
  • Games User Research and Experience
  • New assessment and evaluation methods
  • Quality, experience, and user state
  • Quality of Life and Well-being
  • Multimodal perception & quality
  • Databases for QoE research
  • Audio/Visual user experience
  • QoE-aware networks and services management

Prospective authors are invited to submit full (maximum of 6 pages) or short papers (3 +1 page of references) to the general track and to special sessions. Each paper will undergo a double-blind review process. Full and short papers will be included in the conference proceedings and published in IEEExplore (approval pending).

Important Dates and Details

  • Full Paper Submission: 31 March 2022
  • Full Paper Notification: 20 May 2022
  • Short Paper Submission: 31 May 2022
  • Short Paper Notification: 06 July 2022
  • Conference: September 5-7, 2022

Website: https://qomex2022.itec.aau.at

Twitter: @QoMEXconf

 

General Chair

  • Jan-Niklas Voigt-Antons, HSHL, Germany

Technical Program Chairs

  • Luigi Atzori, Univ. Cagliari,  Italy
  • Sebastian Möller, TU Berlin/DFKI Berlin, Germany
  • Alexander Raake, TU Ilmenau, Germany

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

QoMEX'19: Tile-based Streaming of 8K Omnidirectional Video: Subjective and Objective QoE Evaluation

Tile-based Streaming of 8K Omnidirectional Video: Subjective and Objective QoE Evaluation


[PDF]

Raimund Schatz (AIT Austrian Institute of Technology)Anatoliy Zabrovskiy (Alpen-Adria Universität Klagenfurt)Christian Timmerer (Alpen-Adria Universität Klagenfurt, Bitmovin Inc.)


Abstract: Omnidirectional video (ODV) streaming applications are becoming increasingly popular. They enable a highly immersive experience as the user can freely choose her/his field of view within the 360-degree environment. Current deployments are fairly simple but viewport-agnostic which inevitably results in high storage/bandwidth requirements and low Quality of Experience (QoE). A promising solution is referred to as tile- based streaming which allows to have higher quality within the user’s viewport while quality outside the user’s viewport could be lower. However, empirical QoE assessment studies in this domain are still rare. Thus, this paper investigates the impact of different tile-based streaming approaches and configurations on the QoE of ODV. We present the results of a lab-based subjective evaluation in which participants evaluated 8K omnidirectional video QoE as influenced by different (i) tile-based streaming approaches (full vs. partial delivery), (ii) content types (static vs. moving camera), and (iii) tile encoding quality levels determined by different quantization parameters. Our experimental setup is characterized by high reproducibility since relevant media delivery aspects (including the user’s head movements and dynamic tile quality adaptation) are already rendered into the respective processed video sequences. Additionally, we performed a complementary objective evaluation of the different test sequences focusing on bandwidth efficiency and objective quality metrics. The results are presented in this paper and discussed in detail which confirm that tile-based streaming of ODV improves visual quality while reducing bandwidth requirements.

Index Terms: Omnidirectional Video, Tile-based Streaming, Subjective Testing, Objective Metrics, Quality of Experience

Acknowledgment: This work was supported in part by the Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG) under the Next Generation Video Streaming project "PROMETHEUS".

Sunday, December 23, 2018

What happened in multimedia communication in 2018?

In January 2018 I wrote a blog post entitled "What to care about in multimedia communication in 2018?" and I think it's worth looking back to see what actually happened with respect to next generation video coding formats and adaptive streaming techniques.

In April 2018, the responses to the call for proposals for the next standard in video compression have been evaluated and a first working draft and test model for the Versatile Video Coding (VVC) standard have been approved. At this point already, some proposals demonstrated compression efficiency gains of typically 40% or more when compared to using HEVC. Currently, working draft 3 and test model 3 of VVC (VTM 3) are available and we may certainly expect compression efficiency gains well-beyond the targeted 50% for the final standard. An overview about VVC can be found here (by C. Feldmann) and here (by M. Wien). The licensing issues have been acknowledged and, thus, the Media Coding Industry Forum (MC-IF) has been established.

At the beginning of 2018, everyone was also very curious about AOMedia and AV1. Version 1 of the specification has been finally become available and in the meantime it is implemented/deployed on both content provisioning/encoding (e.g. Bitmovin) and content consumption/decoding (e.g., Chrome, Firefox). In this context, we also published a multi-codec DASH dataset comprising AVC, HEVC, VP9, and AV1 (VVC will be added at a later stage). In general, however, we are entering the era of multiple video codecs deployed in products and services whereby this trend is also confirmed by Bitmovin's latest video developer survey.

MPEG-DASH 3rd edition has been approved and is awaiting publication but I expect this to happen in 2019 though. An overview of the MPEG-DASH status is shown in the figure below.
In this context, the DASH-IF produced various vital assets such as interoperability guidelines (latest v4.3, content protection, ATSC 3.0, SAND), test vectors, conformance tools, and a reference client. For informative aspects of MPEG-DASH such as the bitrate adaptation schemes the interested reader is referred to our survey. This survey gives an overview about existing techniques (see figure below) and also outlines future research. It is available for free for everyone (open access).


Finally, I mentioned a couple of scientific events in 2018 including QoMEX, MMSys (NOSSDAV, PV), ICME, ICIP, PCS, and MIPR. I have attended all of the them (except PCS), each showing advances in their respective field. These events are probably worth to attend also in 2019 but I will certainly blog about this early next year. However, I'd like to hear your opinion of what happened in 2018 and what we may expect in 2019...

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

QoMEX, MMSys, PCS, ICME, ICIP (Re: What to care about in multimedia communication in 2018?)

In January 2018 I posted about "What to care about in multimedia communication in 2018?" and I think it's time to see what happened so far.

MPEG’ & VCEG’s new video coding project starts strong and is now called Versatile Video Coding (VVC) -- see here a presentation about VVC at Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt. At the same time AOMedia "releases AV1" with many showcases at NAB2018.

In my previous blog post I stated that PCS and ICIP will be full of papers related to VVC and AV1. The program of PCS is available now, which even has session on "Performance Comparison of Video Standards" and many other interesting things. ICIP program is not yet available but I expect similar papers (although MPEG/VCEG meeting is scheduled in parallel to ICIP).

Also, our multi-codec DASH dataset paper at MMSys addresses AV1 and check out the program, including also 23rd Packet Video Workshop, which is about new media applications, content coding, and media streaming. QoMEX is actually very close and its program is available here (incl. a subjective comparison of HEVC/H.265, VP9, and AV1).

Once all these papers are available, it would be interesting to perform an in-depth analysis and comparison thereof.

ICME program is not yet available but has a tutorial on "Trends and Recent Developments in Video Coding Standardization" (btw. you may also come and see our tutorial on "Delivering Traditional and Omnidirectional Media").

If you want to get into this area, here are the most important dates:

  • QoMEX, Sardinia, Italy, May 29 - June 1, 2018
  • MMSys (incl. PV), Amsterdam, The Netherlands, June 12-15, 2018
  • PCS, San Francisco, CA, USA, June 24-27, 2018
  • MPEG-Meeting, Ljubljana, Slovenia, Jule 16-20, 2018
  • ICME, San Diego, CA, USA, July 23-27, 2018
  • ICIP, Athens, Greece, October 7-10, 2018
Finally, MPEG celebrated 30 years on May 10, 2018 and you may want to read Leonardo's blog post or the last paragraph of my MPEG report.





Saturday, January 6, 2018

What to care about in multimedia communication in 2018?

In the past days/weeks you may have witness a high number of forecasts/predictions for 2018, like this one here. I'm not so good at predictions and we all learned these days to be careful about speculation. Thus, my focus here is on things to care about in 2018.

MPEG and VCEG are working towards a new video coding standard (naming, number scheme yet to be defined) and the call for proposals is out. Responses will be evaluated by the 122nd MPEG meeting in April 2018 (San Diego, CA, USA) and a new standard is expected to be available in late 2020. The main focus of the CfP is (i) 360-degree omnidirectional video, (ii) high-dynamic range (HDR), (iii) wide colour gamut (WCG), and (iv) conventional standard-dynamic-range camera content. The goal is -- simple, as usual -- compress digital video content, i.e., twice as much as you did before with the same video quality, e.g., as HEVC, or get higher quality with the same number of bits (or a combination thereof). Initial, preliminary results indicate this goal is feasible and everyone is looking forward to the MPEG meeting in April; certainly a place to be.

In addition to what MPEG/VCEG is doing, the Alliance for Open Media gained significant attention with its AV1 codec, first demos are available, and recently also Apple joined AOM. AV1 is not longer controlled by a single company, and, thus, it is becoming a real alternative in the video coding landscape, specifically for the streaming market. The nice thing, it's open source and royalty-free! In other words, one should not neglect AV1 and I think we will see many, hopefully good news in 2018.

On this topic, you might be interested in reading this and this.

What about DASH in 2018? We will see a 3rd edition of MPEG-DASH, the DASH-IF will further work on interoperability points, and I expect further convergence of DASH and HLS towards CMAF. However, I also expect minor changes for the main, common use cases utilizing the core technology of HTTP adaptive streaming. Changes, if any, will be transparent to most of us. On the other hand, immersive media and user engagement will become more and more important as more services are delivered over the top leading to more content becoming available to end users, thus, increasing competition among providers, vendors, etc. As a consequence, (a) content, (b) quality, and (c) costs will be important aspects, whereby (a+c) are "easy to sell" but (b) is still difficult to quantify (and "sell") with many open issues to solve in the (near) future.

Before drifting off to forecasts and predictions, I'd like to conclude with a list of scientific events in 2018 which are worthwhile to attend:
  • QoMEX -- Int'l Conf. on Quality of Multimedia Experience -- will be hosted in Sardinia, Italy from May 29-31, which is THE conference to be for QoE of multimedia applications and services. Submission deadline is January 15/22, 2018.
  • MMSys -- Multimedia Systems Conf. -- and specifically Packet Video, which will be on June 12 in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Packet Video is THE adaptive streaming scientific event 2018. Submission deadline is March 1, 2018.
  • Additionally, you might be interested in ICME (July 23-27, 2018, San Diego, USA; I'm part of a tutorial there;), ICIP (October 7-10, 2018, Athens, Greece; specifically in the context of video coding), and PCS (June 24-27, 2018, San Francisco, CA, USA; also in the context of video coding).
  • The DASH-IF academic track hosts special events at MMSys (Excellence in DASH Award) and ICME (DASH Grand Challenge).
  • MIPR -- 1st Int'l Conf. on Multimedia Information Processing and Retrieval -- will be in Miami, Florida, USA from April 10-12, 2018. It has a broad range of topics including networking for multimedia systems as well as systems and infrastructures.

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

QoMEX'17 Review: Down the Rabbit Hole - Immersive Experience

During QoMEX 2017 in Erfurt, Germany we had a special session entitled "Down the Rabbit Hole" which I have introduced here already. The papers of the special session will appear soon in IEEEXplore but together with my co-organizers of this special session -- Raimund Schatz and Judith Redi -- we also wanted to run the special session in a special way. Therefore, we asked authors to prepare concise and thought-provoking paper presentations (~15min incl. Q&A -- paper title, presenter, picture, key words below) to save some time for a panel discussion. Surprisingly, it worked very well and the special session turned out to be worthwhile and informative. In order to keep the audience connected and involved we posted a single slide of all panelists (i.e., paper presenters) which was shown all the time (see below).


The discussion was centered around the question "what is your understanding of a fully immersive experience" which revealed interesting aspects and finally resulted in the main challenge how to quantify immersive experience. In this context, Mr. T. (only those who've been at QoMEX and in this session know why he is called Mr. T. -- join us next time and we will explain you what's behind) raised an interesting idea to interpret the Turing test for immersive experience. That is, fully or truly immersive experience is achieved if a human is no longer aware that she/he actually interacts with cyber-physical systems. I think this statement sets the bar (high) but definitely worth to consider.

Finally, I'd like to thank all presenters/panelists for an amazing special session at QoMEX'17 but the journey is not yet over. I'll be attending ACM MMSys and IEEE ICME presenting/discussing various aspects of immersive experiences; also at the MPEG meeting in Torino which will be dedicated to standardization aspects of immersive experiences.

Also big big thanks to the conference organizers, the team around the general chair Alexander Raake
(TU Ilmenau, Germany), for hosting such a wonderful event! Hope seeing you all next year for QoMEX 2018.

Feel free to test/play around with Bitmovin solutions for VR/360-degree streaming and if you have a RICOH THETA S check out my blog post how to setup a live streaming session.

Come and join us on the journey down the rabbit hole which eventually will lead to wonderland.




Friday, May 19, 2017

QoMEX'17 Special Session 2: Down the Rabbit Hole – General Aspects of VR and the Immersion Experience


QoMEX 2017
May 31 – June 2, 2017 in Erfurt, Germany


Picture from http://www.chalquist.com/fantastophobia.html

Chairs

  • Raimund Schatz, Austrian Institute of Technology (AIT), Austria
  • Christian Timmerer, Alpen-Adria-Universität (AAU) Klagenfurt, Austria
  • Judith Redi, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands

Motivation

Currently, we witness a proliferation of new products and applications based on immersive media technologies – exemplified best by the current “VR hype” causing a flurry of new devices and applications to hit the market place. The potential of immersive media is large, however, investigation and application of QoE in this context is still in its infancy as many issues are not yet understood. Consequently, the multimedia-quality community faces new, rapidly moving research targets, resulting in the following overarching questions:
  • What is the interplay between concepts like Immersion, Presence, Interactivity, Multimedia Quality and User Experience in the context of emerging immersive applications and technologies?
  • What should be the role of QoE in this domain?
  • How to characterize, assess, model and manage QoE for immersive media-rich applications?
This special session aims to bring together researchers and practitioners to present and discuss quality-related issues and topics in the field of immersive media. The goal is to highlight the major challenges the multimedia quality community should target in this dynamically evolving domain and identify ways forward to addressing them effectively.

All QoMEX'17 special sessions can be found here.

Schedule & Format

Thursday, June 1, 2017, 13:00 -- 15:00
  1. Chenyan Zhang, Andrew Perkis and Sebastian Arndt, Spatial Immersion versus Emotional Immersion, Which is More Immersive?
  2. Conor Keighrey, Ronan Flynn, Siobhan Murray and Niall Murray, A QoE Evaluation of Augmented and Immersive Virtual Reality Speech & Language Assessment Applications 
  3. Raimund Schatz, Andreas Sackl, Christian Timmerer and Bruno Gardlo, Towards Subjective Quality of Experience Assessment for Omnidirectional Video Streaming
  4. Ashutosh Singla, Stephan Fremerey, Werner Robitza and Alexander Raake, Measuring and Comparing QoE and Simulator Sickness of Omnidirectional Videos in Different Head Mounted Displays
  5. Yashas Rai, Patrick Le Callet and Philippe Guillotel, Which saliency weighting for omni directional image quality assessment?
  6. Evgeniy Upenik, Martin Rerabek and Touradj Ebrahimi, On the Performance of Objective Metrics for Omnidirectional Visual Content
The special session format will be as follows:
  • 15min slots per presentation (12-13min talk, 1min for 1 question, 1-2 min time for speaker change)
  • 30min for panel discussion

Panel Discussion

For the panel discussion, our aim is to address the following questions:
  1. What is your understanding of a fully immersive experience (provide a definition or propose keywords to characterize immersive experiences)?
  2. Which aspects should the QoMEX community focus on?
  3. What can we learn and which knowledge can we re-use from the 3D and HDR research experiences?
... and we'd like to solicit also input from the community at large. Therefore, we setup a shared Google doc which is available here, asking for YOUR input: http://bit.ly/QoMEXSpS2.

Come and join us on the journey down the rabbit hole which eventually will lead to wonderland.

Thursday, April 27, 2017

QoMEX'17 paper accepted: "Towards Subjective Quality of Experience Assessment for Omnidirectional Video Streaming"

Towards Subjective Quality of Experience Assessment for Omnidirectional Video Streaming 

Raimund Schatz (AIT), Andreas Sackl (AIT), Christian Timmerer (AAU/Bitmovin) and Bruno Gardlo (AIT)

Abstract: Currently, we witness dramatically increasing interest in immersive media technologies like Virtual Reality (VR), particularly in omnidirectional video (OV) streaming. Omnidirectional (also called 360-degree) videos are panoramic spherical videos in which the user can look around during playback and which therefore can be understood as hybrids between traditional movie streaming and interactive VR worlds. Unfortunately, streaming this kind of content is extremely bandwidth intensive (compared to traditional 2D video) and therefore, Quality of Experience (QoE) tends to deteriorate significantly in absence of continuous optimal bandwidth conditions.

In this paper, we present a first approach towards subjective QoE assessment for omnidirectional video (OV) streaming. We present the results of a lab study on the QoE impact of stalling in the context of OV streaming using head-mounted displays (HMDs). Our findings show that subjective testing for immersive media like OV is not trivial, with even simple cases like stalling leading to unexpected results. After a discussion of characteristic pitfalls and lessons learned, we provide a a set of recommendations for upcoming OV assessment studies.


Please feel free to contact me for details and/or I'd be happy to meet you at QoMEX'17.

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

New Springer Journal “Quality and User Experience”

In 2016, the Springer journal “Quality and User Experience” was launched (Editors-in-Chief: S. Möller; M. Tscheligi). It presents research on the human experience and quality perception of digital media, telecommunication and Information Communications Technology (ICT) products and interactive services. It explores human-centered and technology-centered approaches and examines a range of perspectives on quality of experience. Coverage includes mobile and pervasive applications, augmented and virtual reality, gaming, video conferencing, telepresence, and video-on-demand. Tactics can be human centered (e.g., to characterize user perceptions) or technology centered (to guide product development). As a result of this research, technologies, products and systems can be evaluated and optimized to provide optimum experience; this optimization process is also targeted by the journal.

The journal promotes integration of knowledge by assembling a range of disciplinary perspectives on experience quality: quality of experience (QoE), user experience (UX), quality management, usability engineering, human-centered design, cognitive processes, subjective audio & video quality assessment, and human-computer interaction.



The journal will encourage and enable first class research from any scientific discipline that contributes to and shows relevance to quality of experience and user experience. Examples include: development of a new metric based on subjective or objective analysis; taxonomies and models to define and explain quality of experience and user experience; relationship to other concepts such as user acceptance or value systems; lab or situated studies delivering insights to specific experience aspects, discussion of influence factors on UX and QoE and their relationships; the significance of time for the dynamics of user experience and quality of experience, relevant insights from different disciplines such as design, psychology, social sciences or material science; research in contextual experiences to capture specific situations including specific domain aspects; tools and frameworks towards the development of next generation experiences; methods to capture, analyze, design and evaluate user experience and quality of experience; user experience research related to special user groups, special needs as well personal differences; insights on the design of experiences from the constructive as well as from the process perspective; experience design approaches and methods; viewpoints on the meaning of experience design; and experience design for specific application domains.  

Please note that QUEX offers permanent free access to all articles published in 2016 and 2017.

More information: http://link.springer.com/journal/41233

Monday, April 14, 2014

Special Sessions at QoMEX 2014

QoMEX 2014 is inviting submissions to the following special sessions:
The purpose of these special sessions is to complement the regular program with new or emerging topics of particular interest to the community.

The submission deadlines and review process for papers in the special sessions are the same as for regular papers. To submit your contribution to a special session, follow the submission process for regular papers and select the session title as one of the paper’s topics.

Important dates:
  • Submission deadline: May 4, 2014
  • Notification of acceptance: June 15, 2014
  • Camera-ready papers: July 13, 2014
  • Workshop dates: September 18-20, 2014

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Call for Papers: QoMEX 2014


6th International Workshop on Quality of Multimedia Experience
Singapore, 18-20 Sept. 2014

The sixth International Workshop on Quality of Multimedia Experience (QoMEX) will bring together leading experts from academia and industry interested in evaluating multimedia quality and user experience. Coming to Asia for the first time, QoMEX 2014 will be held in Singapore, conveniently located adjacent to InterSpeech and MMSP.

Prospective organizers of special sessions are invited to submit proposals as per the guidelines on the web site. Prospective authors are invited to prepare full (six pages) and/or short (two pages) papers. Furthermore, authors of recent journal papers will have the opportunity to present their work as a poster. Please refer to the workshop web site (www.qomex2014.org) for more details. Proceedings will be published in the IEEE Xplore digital library (pending).

TOPICS OF INTEREST:

QoE Fundamentals: Understanding experience and quality formation; alternatives to MOS; quality vs. user satisfaction vs. acceptance; crowdsourcing studies; long-term quality measurement; physiological QoE assessment; emotions & QoE.

Audio/Visual User Experience: Objective/subjective quality evaluation of speech, audio, video, multimedia; spatial/3D audio and stereo/multi-view video quality; psycho-physical modeling; quality-centered processing, compression and transmission; perceptual optimization.

QoE in Graphics & Rendering: High-dynamic range imaging; (non-)photorealistic rendering; object/texture/motion modeling; special effects; virtual/augmented/mixed realities, games.

Sensory User Experiences: Methods for sensory user feedback; quality metrics for ambient and sensory experiences; novel sensory interfaces; multisensory interaction.

Interactive Systems QoE: Tele-conferencing/tele-presence; multimedia-based group inter-action; gaming; multimedia Web search/browsing; e-commerce; social media applications.

QoE for Mobile Devices: Evaluating multimedia applications and interactive experiences on mobile devices; impact of viewing conditions and device properties; adaptive user interfaces.

QoE-centric Network and Application Management: Distributed and central management approaches; cloud-based multimedia services; adaptive media streaming; link between QoS and QoE; interoperability; performance optimization; pricing and service-level agreements.

Reproducible QoE Research: Multimedia databases/datasets; benchmarking and certification; testing conditions and methods; standardization efforts; open-source QoE tools.


IMPORTANT DATES:

Special session proposals:
Submission deadline: 23 February 2014
Notification of acceptance: 9 March 2014

Full & short papers:
Submission deadline: 4 May 2014
Notification of acceptance: 15 June 2014
Camera-ready submission: 13 July 2014

Journal paper presentations:
Submission deadline: 29 June 2014
Notification of acceptance: 13 July 2014


ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:

General Chair
Stefan Winkler, ADSC/UIUC

General Co-Chair
Susanto Rahardja, NUS

Technical Program Chairs
Weisi Lin, NTU
Alexander Raake, TU Berlin
Zhou Wang, Univ. Waterloo

Special Session Chair
Luigi Atzori, Univ. Cagliari

Steering Committee
Loretta Anania, EC
Ian Burnett, RMIT
Touradj Ebrahimi, EPFL/NTNU
Khaled El-Maleh, Qualcomm
Lina Karam, ASU
Patrick Le Callet, Univ. Nantes
Sebastian Mˆller, TU Berlin
Fernando Pereira, IST-IT
Andrew Perkis, NTNU
Amy Reibman, AT&T Labs
Peter Schelkens, iMinds/VUB
Christian Timmerer, AAU

Publicity Chairs
Guangtao Zhai, SJTU
Margaret Pinson, NTIA

Finance Chair
Pina Marziliano, NTU

Local Arrangements Chairs
Lai-Tee Cheok, SMU
Ngai-Man Cheung, SUTD


SPONSORS:
ACM SIGGRAPH Singapore Chapter
IEEE Singapore Section Signal Processing Chapter

Monday, September 16, 2013

A Review of the 5th International Workshop on Quality of Multimedia Experience (QoMEX) 2013

July 3-5, 2013
Klagenfurt am Wörthersee, Austria
This blog post comprises a review of the 5th International Workshop on Quality of Multimedia Experience (QoMEX) 2013. This review is also published within the QUALINET Newsletter [PDF].

Multimedia has become pervasive in the last decade and is a ubiquitous part of modern life. Multimedia content is delivered to a wide variety of devices both fixed and mobile, the consumption environment can vary dramatically, and users increasingly demand fulfilling interaction with their media. Evaluation, both objective and subjective, of separate audio, video, or image content is well established, but there are substantial challenges in assessing users’ experiences of mixed content. This is exacerbated by the diversity of devices, interfaces, consumption environments, and content prevalent in today’s market. Increasingly, evaluation approaches must include psychological, perceptual, and contextual dimensions to truly represent and measure the users’ experiences. Understanding and modelling how users react to and perceive content and applications will inform and improve new applications and lead to better user experiences.

QoMEX is the flagship scientific event of the COST Action IC1003 QUALINET. After San Diego (2009), Trondheim (2010), Mechelen (2011), and Yarra Valley (2012), QoMEX 2013 is being held in Klagenfurt am Wörthersee, Austria. With its modern facilities and pleasant surroundings, Klagenfurt provides an excellent venue for three days of interesting presentations, stimulating discussions, networking, and cooperation opportunities on recent research in quality of multimedia experience.
Program Highlights

QoMEX 2013 includes 52 accepted papers (out of 118 submissions), organized into three regular oral sessions, three special sessions, and two poster sessions. The special sessions are as follows:
QoMEX provides a forum for researchers, practitioners, teachers, and engineers to share their datasets/databases in the area of Quality of Experience. This effort has been started in 2012 and is successfully continued in 2013. The dataset will be hosted as part of the COST Action IC1003 QUALINET and in collaboration with the ACM Multimedia Systems dataset.

Furthermore, three exciting invited talks by renowned experts with quite varied background are being offered, namely:
  • "Kansei Engineering: How to design emotional experiences into products and services" by Simon Schütte, Linköping University, Sweden. 
The presentation is available here and the video is available also.




  • "3D Video Processing, Perception, and Quality – A Content Creator’s Perspective" by Aljoša Smolić, Disney Research Zurich, Switzerland.


  • "6 factors to consider in quality of media experience" by Peter Purgathofer, Vienna University of Technology, Austria.



Finally, the QUALINET Industry Forum and Expo will hopefully stimulate interaction and strengthen the links between the workshop participants from academia and industry. It also includes an invited talk from Thomas Richter on "HDR Image Quality in the Evolution of JPEG XT".


QoMEX is also known for providing excellent QoE in all social activities which allows for scientific discussions and beyond. In particular, QoMEX 2013 offered a welcome reception at the workshop venue and the workshop dinner at Werzer’s Hotel Resort in Pörtschach with a prior boat trip on the lovely lake Wörthersee.


During the workshop dinner, the best papers have been awarded as follows:

Best Student Paper Award

Olli Rummukainen, Javier Gómez Bolanõs, and Ville Pulkki: Horizontal Localization of Auditory and Visual Events with Directional Audio Coding and 2D Video

Abstract: The effects of using two-dimensional video projection together with parametric three-dimensional spatial audio reproduction system are examined in this study. The discrepancy between the auditory and visual events, and differing depth cues, are evaluated by means of subjective evaluations using the method of adjustment. The results show the Directional Audio Coding to be well suited for immersive audiovisual setups allowing a large area of viewing positions.



Best Paper Award

Andrew Hines, Peter Počta, and Hugh Melvin: Detailed Comparative Analysis of PESQ and ViSQOL Behaviour in the Context of Playout Delay Adjustments Introduced by VoIP Jitter Buffer Algorithms

Abstract: This paper undertakes a detailed comparative analysis of both PESQ and VISQOL model behaviour, when tested against speech samples modified through playout delay adjustments. The adjustments are typical (in extent and magnitude) to those introduced by VoIP jitter buffer algorithms. Furthermore, the analysis examines the impact of adjustment location as well as speaker factors on MOS scores predicted by both models and seeks to determine if both models are able to correctly predict the impact on quality perceived by the end user from earlier subjective tests. The earlier results showed speaker voice preference and potentially wideband experience dominating subjective tests more than playout delay adjustment duration or location. By design, PESQ and VISQOL do not qualify speaker voice difference reducing their correlation with the subjective tests. In addition, it was found that PESQ scores are impacted by playout delay adjustments and thus the impact of playout delay adjustments on a quality perceived by the end user is not well modelled. On the other hand, VISQOL model is better in predicting an impact of playout delay adjustments on a quality perceived by the user but there are still some discrepancies in the predicted scores. The reasons for those discrepancies are particularly analysed and discussed.


As an organizer I’d like to thank you for attending QoMEX 2013 and I’d like to handover to QoMEX 2014 which will be held in Singapore and chaired by Stefan Winkler.

Further information about QoMEX 2013 can be obtained from http://www.qomex2013.org/. Please find below feedback from participants.
QoMEX 2013 provided a small, focused workshop on quality of multimedia experience. Excellent facilities and amazing summer weather created a relaxed environment for a range of conversations with colleagues. While there were many interesting papers, for me the plenary sessions were particularly notable – from Kansei Engineering of products to the details of 3D video and image processing, QoMEX 2013 embraced the true breadth of Quality of Experience. Overall, QoMEX 2013 again demonstrated that the small, focused workshop style environment creates a depth and quality that truly warrants international conference travel.
--Ian Burnett, RMIT, Australia
I've had the pleasure of having an end-to-end view of QoMEX 2013, from the point of view of the organizers, as part of the organizing committee, as an author, and also as an attendee, in beautiful Klagenfurt am Wörthersee. The experience was truly excellent throughout. From the joint work with the organization committee and TPC members, the high-quality program we had this year, the perfect logistics in Klagenfurt, and swimming in the Wörthersee, the whole experience was indeed delightful.
--Martin Varela, VTT, Finland
QoMEX has clearly developed into a stable platform for the exchange of knowledge in the area of Quality of Experience, with a focus on visual and multimodal experiences. The number of participants and of high-quality papers shows that it is of high relevance for the community.
--Sebastian Möller, Telekom Innovation Laboratories/TU Berlin, Germany
When the story is in the story: QoMEX 2013
Intense workshop, fully crowded from the first session till the last one, endless days stimulated by discussion, QoMEX 2013 has been a big success confirming the strength and the growing value of our community. Special thanks should go to Christian Timmerer and the local organizing crew for the amazing conditions they offered: experiencing a «mise en abyme», a sensation of being experts exchanging on QoE while living at the same time many delicious experiences. Christian, as responsible author of the application section of the QUALINET white paper on definitions of QoE, surely had in mind and successfully managed to extend our vision on application domain for QoE. As a matter of fact QoE was not only a matter of talks and papers, but something everyone could touch on from many other sources and media during these three days! QoMEX is about QoE & multimedia …well we have a QUALINET definition for QoE, revisiting definition of multimedia could be also considered.
--Patrick Le Callet, Ecole polytechnique de l’université de Nantes, France
QoMEX 2013 was a true quality event - not only because one could learn a lot about the subject of QoE, but also because one could experience quality in many different aspects of the workshop: the perfect organization, the technical sessions and plenary talks, the inspiring ambiance of the Seepark Hotel as well as the enjoyment of some of the best local food and drink specialities. In this respect, one of my personal highlights was the boat trip across the lake Wörthersee, which in combination with the sunset and the dinner reception at "Werzer's Badehaus" enabled a truly memorable "Quality of the Lake Experience".
--Raimund Schatz, FTW, Austria
In a sense, I there was something missing in QoMEX’13. It was so filled with exciting scientific contributions and inspiring talks, so full of opportunities to interact with researchers and industrial partners, both during the poster/IF-demo-expo sessions and the delicious lunches, so well organized also in terms of memorable social events, that I missed the time to make use of the SPA facilities of the wonderful hotel where QoMEX’13 was hosted!
--Judith Redi, TU Delft, The Netherlands
I luckily had the chance to visit QoMEX'13 in Klagenfurt this year, and can say that it was really a great experience. It was a focused and dedicated forum where researchers came together to exchange research results, discus, inspire each other, and, last but not least, socialize. Everything was excellently choreographed by Christian Timmerer and his great team. As such, it was a truly community building event, which I expect to last and grow. I personally look back warmly to 2 awesome days in Klagenfurt and am looking forward to participating in QoMEX also in the future.
--Aljoscha Smolic, Disney Research Zurich, Switzerland
I thoroughly enjoyed QoMEX 2013, as it offered something for all senses: inspiring presentations, stimulating discussions, and excellent Austrian food, all in a beautiful location with great weather. The QoMEX steering committee also assigned the task of hosting next year's edition of the workshop to our organizing committee. It will be held September 18-20, 2014 in Singapore. We are already hard at work putting together an event and experience that will hopefully be as exciting and memorable as this year's. I look forward to welcoming you in Singapore for QoMEX 2014!
--Stefan Winkler, ADSC/UIUC, Singapore
The technical program is focused on the quality issues, however, manages to span a broad field of methods and application areas. The program attracts the larger community in the multidisciplinary aspect og multimedia technology. The conference was at a lovely venue and the single track feature gives rise to a lot of discussions amongst peers and provides a valuable arena both for fresh and the experienced researcher. The setting of attempting to keep the participants together for meals and evening activities strengthens the dialog and sense of community building.
--Andrew Perkis, NTNU, Norway
As an invited keynote speaker I have my expertise in the area of affective engineering. Despite that I felt that I was warmly welcome by the QoMEX community and we found many common points of interest.
--Simon Schütte, Linköping University, Sweden

Monday, March 25, 2013

QUALINET Multimedia Databases

A key for current and future developments in Quality of Experience resides in a rich and internationally recognized database of content of different sorts, and to share such a database with the scientific community at large. The QUALINET Database platform takes the necessary steps to make them accessible to all researchers:

(registration is free of charge)

Currently, the QUALINET database comprises > 170 multimedia databases, based on literature/Internet search and input from QUALINET partner laboratories. They're mostly image (~52) or video datasets (~68), with (~57) or w/o subjective quality rating, special content, e.g. 3D (~23), FV, eyetracking (~21), audio, audiovisual (~8), HDR (~14), and other modalities.

The documentation of the QUALINET databases can be found on the corresponding Wiki page. For an overview, please consult the white paper on QUALINET databases (PDF) and please reference it as follows:
Karel Fliegel, Christian Timmerer, (eds.), “WG4 Databases White Paper v1.5: QUALINET Multimedia Database enabling QoE Evaluations and Benchmarking”, Prague/Klagenfurt, Czech Republic/Austria, Version 1.5, March 2013.

Finally, you're welcome to contribute to this effort, simply send an email to wg4.qualinet@listes.epfl.ch and briefly describe your dataset [to subscribe, send an e-mail (its content is unimportant) to wg4.qualinet-subscribe@listes.epfl.ch, you will receive information to confirm your subscription, and upon the acceptance of the moderator will be included in the mailing-list].

Additionally, you may consider submitting a dataset paper to QoMEX or MMSys which hosts dataset tracks and accepted dataset paper will be automatically included within the QUALINET database.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Colloquium on Quality of Experience in Multimedia Systems and Services [Video, Slides]

With this blog post I'd like to provide the slides from the colloquium on quality of experience in multimedia systems and services, November 23, 2012, 09:00-13:00 Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt, Austria. The following provides an index to the videos and slides of the talks:
Pictures are provided in the Facebook group of QUALINET. The next scientific event sponsored by QUALINET is QoMEX'13 followed by PQS'13.

Friday, November 9, 2012

Colloquium on Quality of Experience in Multimedia Systems and Services


November 23, 2012, 09:00-13:00
Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt, Austria
Seminar Room of Lakeside Labs
Chair: Christian Timmerer



Multimedia is a ubiquitous part of modern life; content is delivered to a wide variety of devices both fixed and mobile, the consumption environment can vary dramatically, and users increasingly demand fulfilling interaction with their media. Evaluation, both objective and subjective, of separate audio, video, or image content is well established, but there are substantial challenges in assessing users’ experiences of mixed content. This is exacerbated by the diversity of devices, interfaces, consumption environments, and content prevalent in today’s market. Increasingly, evaluation approaches must include psychological, perceptual, and contextual dimensions to truly represent and measure the users’ experiences. Understanding and modelling how users react to and perceive content and applications will inform and improve new applications and lead to better user experiences.

In this context the Förderverein Technische Fakultät and COST Action IC1003 QUALINET invites interested parties, specifically researchers, practitioners, and students to the Colloquium on Quality of Experience in Multimedia Systems and Services. Additionally, the colloquium will hold as part of the research topic "Human Centered Computing and Design" established at he Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt.

We are happy to announce the program as follows with distinguished speakers who are all in leading positions of the COST Action IC1003 QUALINET.

Program

09:00-09:15: Welcome notice and introduction

09:15-10:00: Keynote on "Quality of Experience: Past, Present and Future trends" by Touradj Ebrahimi, EPFL

10:00-10:30: Quality Prediction for Speech-based Telecommunication Services by Sebastian Möller, Quality and usability lab, Telekom Innovation Labs, TU Berlin

10:30-11:00: Quality of Experience of 3DTV and Beyond by Patrick Le Callet, Univ. of Nantes

11:00-11:15: Coffee break

11:15-11:45: Influence of Chromatic Information on QoE by Antonio Pinheiro, U.B.I., Portugal

11:45-12:15: Bitstream and hybrid-based video quality assessment for IPTV monitoring by Savvas Argyropoulos, Telekom Innovation Labs, TU Berlin

12:15-12:45: Machine Learning for objective QoE assessment: Science, Myths and a look to the future by Judith Redi, TU Delft.

12:45-13:15: Overview of Qualinet multimedia databases by Karel Fliegel, Czech Technical University in Prague

13:15: Closing and lunch

Registration
The registration to this colloquium is free of charge and includes workshop attendance, coffee break, and lunch. However, you are required to send an email to Melissa.Aichholzer@aau.at (cc: christian.timmerer@itec.aau.at).

Location
Lakeside Labs with detailed location information incl. nearby hotels here. Additionally, a Google map with the most important point of interests can be found here.

Related links:



Abstracts and biographies of distinguished speakers



Titel: Quality of Experience : Past, Present and Future Trends
Presenter: Touradj Ebrahimi - EPFL

Abstract: With recent progress in networks, devices and interfaces, the traditional ways media has been produced, distributed and consumed have gone through major changes. This paradigm shift is expected to continue, giving birth to new products, services and business models, well beyond those implemented or even imagined today. One constant in all this change is the continuing pursuit of higher, richer and better user experience. Quality of Experience is believed by many to provide the right framework to achieve this goal. 
This talk will start by providing a historical perspective of quality and how it has been evaluated in conventional and even current multimedia systems. We will then discuss different definitions of Quality of Experience and some of the models based on such definitions. The talk will then provide a number of illustrative examples of QoE definitions and models in concrete situations, namely, mobile 3D and mobile media consumption. We will then conclude with a discussion on majors trends and challenges in QoE. 

CV: Touradj Ebrahimi is currently Professor at EPFL heading its Multimedia Signal Processing Group. He is also adjunct Professor with the Center of Quantifiable Quality of Service at Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). In 2001, he was the first to suggest the notion of Quality of Experience (QoE) be used in multimedia communication systems, and since has produced more than 50 publications on this topic. Prof. Ebrahimi is a co-founder of the International Workshop on Quality of Multimedia Experience (QoMEX), and serves as the chair of the European COST Action IC1003 (Qualinet), on quality of experience in multimedia systems and services. His other research interests include still, moving, and 3D image processing and coding, visual information security (rights protection, watermarking, authentication, data integrity, steganography), new media, and human computer interfaces (smart vision, brain computer interface). He is the author or the co-author of more than 200 research publications, and holds 14 patents. Prof. Ebrahimi is a member of IEEE, SPIE, ACM and IS&T.


Titel: Quality Prediction for Speech-based Telecommunication Services
Presenter: Sebastian Möller, Quality and usability lab, Telekom Innovation Labs, TU Berlin

Abstract: Speech-based services come in an ever increasing variety, and it becomes more and more difficult for system designers and service operators to ensure a sufficiently high quality, usability, and finally acceptance of these services. Whereas the ultimate way to measure quality is by asking test users, such empirical tests require a substantial effort in terms of time and money, and are thus commonly limited to an absolute minimum. One way to cope with this problem is to estimate the quality which will be perceived by the user on the basis of physically measurable quantities, such as speech signals, or parameters describing a spoken interaction.

In this talk, we will present approaches for prediction the quality and usability of speech-based services taking three common application examples: (1) Speech transmission services where overall quality as well as individual quality dimensions can be estimated from transmitted and reference speech signals; (2) synthesized-speech services where no reference is available but can be built artificially with the help of prior knowledge; as well as (3) spoken dialogue services where user behavior needs to be predicted, with the help of probabilities and rules. Small examples will underline the usefulness but also the limitations of the currently available approaches.

CV: Sebastian Möller was born in 1968 and studied electrical engineering at the universities of Bochum (Germany), Orléans (France) and Bologna (Italy). From 1994 to 2005, he held the position of a scientific researcher at the Institute of Communication Acoustics (IKA), Ruhr-University Bochum, and worked on speech signal processing, speech technology, communication acoustics, as well as on speech communication quality aspects. Since June 2005, he works at Deutsche Telekom Laboratories, TU Berlin. He was appointed Professor at TU Berlin for the subject "Quality and Usability" in April 2007, and heads the "Quality and Usability Lab" at Telekom Innovation Laboratories.

He received a Doctor-of-Engineering degree at Ruhr-University Bochum in 1999 for his work on the assessment and prediction of speech quality in telecommunications. In 2000, he was a guest scientist at the Institut dalle Molle d'Intélligence Artificielle Perceptive (IDIAP) in Martigny (Switzerland) where he worked on the quality of speech recognition systems. He gained the qualification needed to be a professor (venia legendi) at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology at Ruhr-University Bochum in 2004, with a book on the quality of telephone-based spoken dialogue systems. In September 2008, we worked as a Visiting Fellow at MARCS Auditory Laboratories, University of Western Sydney (Australia) on the evaluation of avatars. In November 2011, he was Visiting Professor at the Universidad de Granada (Spain), and from Februar to April 2012 Visiting Professor at the Ben Gurion University of the Negev in Be'er Sheva (Israel). He is currently Adjunct Professor at the University of Canberra (Australia). His most recent book on "Quality Engineering" was published in 2010.

Sebastian Möller was awarded the GEERS prize in 1998 for his interdisciplinary work on the analysis of infant cries for early hearing-impairment detection, the ITG prize of the German Association for Electrical, Electronic & Information Technologies (VDE) in 2001, the Lothar-Cremer prize of the German Acoustical Association (DEGA) in 2003, a Heisenberg fellowship of the German Research Foundation (DFG) in 2005, and the Johann Philipp Reis prize in 2009. Since 1997, he has taken part in the standardization activities of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU-T) on transmission performance of telephone networks and terminals. He is currently acting as a Rapporteur for question Q.8/12.

Titel: Quality of Experience of 3DTV and Beyond
Presenter: Patrick Le Callet, Univ. of Nantes

Abstract: S-3DTV (Stereoscopic-3DTV), HDR (High Dynamic range), 4K are recent considered technologies to improve the viewer experience. Nevertheless, such technologies are really useful only if properly tuned to increase the Quality of Experience (QoE). For instance, S-3DTV (stereoscopic-3DTV) is supposed to provide enhanced depth perception to viewer but might affect other factors of user experience. Subjective assessment is the most direct way to assess quality of experience (QoE). However, conventional assessment methods are not sufficient to evaluate the QoE of S-3DTV. This talk aims to review the challenge of QoE assessment through use cases related to S-3DTV and HDR. Methodologies to evaluate QoE with observers will be discussed, including environment conditions, scales and display characterization.

CV: Patrick LE CALLET is full professor at Ecole polytechnique de l’université de Nantes (Engineer School) in the Electrical Engineering and the Computer Science department where. Since 2006, he is the head of the Image and VideoCommunication lab at CNRS IRCCyN, a group of more than 35 researchers. He is mostly engaged in research dealing with the application of human vision modeling in image and video processing. His current centers of interest are 3D image and video quality assessment, watermarking techniques and visual attention modeling and applications. He is co-author of more than 150 publications and communications and co-inventor of 13 international patents on these topics. He has coordinated and is currently managing for IRCCyN several National or European collaborative research programs representing grants of more than 2,5 million euros. He is serving in VQEG (Video Quality Expert Group) where is co-chairing the "HDR Group" and "3DTV" activities. He is currently serving as associate editor for IEEE transactions on Circuit System and Video Technology, SPIE Journal of Electronic Imaging and SPRINGER EURASIP Journal on Image and Video Processing.

Title: Influence of Chromatic Information on QoE
Presenter: Antonio Pinheiro, U.B.I., Portugal

Abstract: The low sensibility revealed by humans to the chromatic information is well known since a long time. That fact was always explored in color multimedia systems! In particular, the early analog color TV systems always had a very reduced amount of chromatic information compared with the amount of luminance information. In this talk, an evaluation of the influence of the chromatic information on QoE of still images is presented. For that, a set of images used for testing are represented in the CIE 1976 (L*a*b*) color space because it is partially uniform and highly related with the human perceptual notion of color. After clustering the image colors, a random error of known magnitude is given to each color cluster on the chromatic components a* and b*, keeping L* constant. With this method images are not degraded by artefacts induced by color discontinuities. A calibrated true color system is used for evaluation of the individuals’ sensibility to color changes. Using the Medium Opinion Score the sensibility to color changes was evaluated and further modelled. As expected, a very low sensibility to chromatic changes was revealed. Finally, objective models for chromatic errors are discussed and the relation between the quality and the emotional state of the subjects is considered.

CV: António M. G. Pinheiro is a lecture at U.B.I. (University of Beira Interior), Covilha, Portugal. After graduated in IST, Portugal in 1988 he worked as Assistant Lecture in U.B.I. In 1998 joined the University of Essex, U.K., where, he received the PhD in Electronic Systems Engineering in 2002 under the supervision of Prof. Mohammed Ghanbari. He is a Portuguese representative in the European Union Action COST IC1003, QUALINET – European Network on Quality of Experience in Multimedia Systems and Services and was a Portuguese representative of COST – 292, Semantic Multimodal Analysis of Digital Media. He is also the coordinator of the research Group Electronic and Computer Systems of the Remote Sensing Unit. Antonio Pinheiro has lectured several courses on Signal and Image Processing and on Digital Systems Design and Microprocessors Architectures and Applications.



Title: Bitstream and hybrid-based video quality assessment for IPTV monitoring
Presenter: Savvas Argyropoulos, Telekom Innovation Labs, TU Berlin

Abstract: The proliferation of IPTV services during the last years has necessitated the development of objective video quality assessment methods. It has become evident that network parameters which define the Quality of Service (Qos) are not sufficient to estimate the service quality perceived by the user, typically referred to as Quality of Experience (QoE). This talk will present an objective no-reference bitstream and hybrid video quality assessment method and provide details on the algorithms which are employed to evaluate different types of degradations, such as compression artefacts, packet loss impairments, playback freezing and re-buffering .

CV: Savvas Argyropoulos received the Diploma and Ph.D. degrees in electrical and computer engineering from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUTH), Thessaloniki, Hellas, in 2004 and 2008, respectively. He is currently a research scientist at Deutsche Telekom Innovation Laboratories (T-Labs), in Berlin, Germany. His research interests include video quality assessment, video coding and transmission, distributed source coding, and perceptual video coding.


Title: Machine Learning for objective QoE assessment: Science, Myths and a look to the future
Presenter: Judith Redi, TU Delft

Abstract: Machine learning has been recently shown to be a very promising tool to support automated QoE assessment. Its ability to mimic highly non-linear, complex phenomena, such as user experience and quality judgment, is extremely appealing for the implementation of on-line, accurate QoE control systems. Nevertheless, applying Machine Learning to QoE is an high risk, high gain approach: if misused, it can lead to poorly flexible and unreliable systems. Key to the attainment of all the gain without risks is a profound understanding of the advantages and limitations that characterize learning machines. Even more important is a strong knowledge of the phenomenon to be mimicked, that is, the user experience.
In this talk, theoretical background, applicative tips and practical examples will be reviewed, with the aim of drawing guidelines for the successful application of Machine Learning to objective QoE assessment.

CV: Judith Redi is Assistant Professor at Delft University of Technology, department of Intelligent Systems, since 2010. She obtained her PhD from the University of Genoa (Italy) in 2010, with a thesis on learning machines for objective image quality assessment, final result of a project on visual quality in displays funded by Philips research. After receiving the award for the best ICT thesis from University of Genoa, she worked as a Post-Doc at Eurecom (France) focusing on image analysis and computer vision. At TU Delft, she works on image and video understanding towards the maximization of the quality of multimedia experiences, for which she was awarded an NWO Veni grant in 2012. She is coordinator of the Qualinet (COST IC1003) Industrial Forum and Management Committee member for the Qualinet COST action.


Title: Overview of Qualinet multimedia databases
Presenter: Karel Fliegel, Czech Technical University in Prague

Abstract: Success of current and future developments in QoE largely depends on availability of proper multimedia content. One of the goals within the interests of the COST Action IC1003 QUALINET and its Working Group 4 (Databases and Validation) is to create rich and internationally recognized database of content of different sorts and take the steps to make it accessible to all researchers. In this talk we will give an overview of current status of this effort with brief description of currently available databases and explanation on how these databases can be used for QoE evaluations and benchmarking. Moreover, we will focus on the Qualinet Databases online tool as Qualinet’s main resource for sharing of the datasets among Qualinet members and scientific community.

CV: Karel Fliegel (born in 1979) received his Ing. (M.Sc.) degree in electrical engineering, specialization in audiovisual technology, from the Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic in 2004 and Ph.D. from the same university in 2011. Currently he holds a position of assistant professor in the Multimedia Technology Group (MMTG) at the CTU in Prague. His research interests include image processing, imaging systems, image and video compression, QoE in multimedia systems. He is a deputy leader in WG 4 (Databases and Validation) of COST Action IC1003 QUALINET.