Title: Audio/Video compression An introduction
1Audio/Video compressionAn introduction
- Alain Bouffioux
- December, 20, 2006
2Agenda
- Introduction - The evolution of Audio/Video
consumer products and the role of compression
techniques. - Audio Video compression principles
- Audio demonstration
- Video demonstration
3Agenda
- Introduction - The evolution of Audio/Video
consumer products and the role of compression
techniques. - Audio Video compression principles
- Audio demonstration
- Video demonstration
4Moores law
- Number of transistors per square inch doubles
every 18 months
5Moores law today
- Cost of a transistor divided by one million in
30 years
6Moores law today (2)
Itanium 2 (2004, 592,000,000)
- Self-fulfulling prophecy roadmap for the
semiconductor industry
7Moores law today (3)
- Roadmap for semiconductor industry only
certainty in the current undefined future - Progress in semiconductors
- fuels the innovation
- fuels the software revolution
- fuels the wireless revolution
- (WLAN, WPAN, WBAN, )
- Examples
- WBAN sensors, RFID applications, camera to
swallow, flexible display - New products related needs motivate
semiconductor industry(? Self-fulfilling
prophecy) - Moores law will continue to apply 10 years, 20
years ? - Economical limitation ? Investment (fixed) cost
/ globalisation - Power consumption (Moores low in reverse
direction) - Architectural gap between IP-blocks application
(middleware still more complex)
8The evolution of CE products (1)
- Past every CE product was analogue
- 1983 Music becomes digital (CD players)
- Early 90ies microprocessor enters CE
devices(Early DVD players incorporated
processing power equivalent to their comtemporary
PC) - Late 90ies Communication features incorporated
within a CE devices.
9The evolution of CE products (2)
- The Residential Gateway (Set-Top-Box, ADSL
modem?) as the link between the home and the
world-wide information infrastructure.
Home Network
World-wide communication infrastructure
RG
10The evolution of CE products (3)
- The Residential gateway (in home) as the gateway
to various services. Local Server provides 2
kind of services - BroadcastAnalogue digital TV, NVOD, PPV
- Point-to-point (Home to local server)Home
shopping, VOD, e-mail, Web browsing, PC
connection...
About 1000 homes
Local server
Network
Internet
Local server
11The evolution of CE products (4)
- The Residential gateway as a key element of the
home network
To telephone Network
Computer
Residential Gateway
To satellite Network
Home Network
Television
To cable Network
Disk Recorder
DVD Jukebox
12The evolution of CE products (5)
- Everything will become digital audio, telephone,
video, photography, newspaperThe question is
not if a selected product will really become
digital the question is when? - Consumer/Computer/Communication Convergence is
progressive - New products combine all 3 domains(e.g. New GSM
devices Television on mobile) - Products always more and more complex
- Products have always new features
- Lifetime of products is always shorter
13Factors enabling such evolution
- Compression is one among the various factors (all
powered by semiconductor progresses) that enable
multimedia technologies.
14BUT !!
- Convergence of technologies (consumer,
communication, computer) All products combine
all three technologies - BUT !
- Divergence of applications
- Home consumer, Multimedia phone, Camera, PDA,
Office computer, Automotive - High number of potential productsTechnology push
?Market pull (user centric approach)
15Agenda
- Introduction - The evolution of Audio/Video
consumer products and the role of compression
techniques. - Audio Video compression principles
- Audio demonstration
- Video demonstration
16Compression in first A/V CE Products (1)
- First Audio/Video products made compression
without knowing it was compression.How ?By
removal of irrelevancies (sampling rate,
quantization) - Audio and Video characteristics
17Compression in first A/V CE Products (2)
- Audio productsFrom 2 to 7.1 channels are enough
to provide the spatial resolution. - Video productsThree colours (RGB) are enough to
provide the spectral resolution.
18The need for more compression (1/5)
- Audio Compression needed in spectral domain
- Bitrate of a stereo audio source (CD-DA
encoding) Sampling frequency
44.1 kHzStereo16-bit per sampleBitrate 44100
2 16 1.41 Mbit/sec
19The need for more compression (2/5)
- Video Compression needed in spatial domain
- Bitrate of a video source (CCIR 601 - 50 Hz
countries) 25 images per secondYUV
coding (Y luminance - U,V Chrominance)Y 8
bit per pixel - U,V 1 pixel on 2 coded, 8 bit
per pixelBitrate (576720)2516 166 Mbit/sec
20The need for more compression (3/5)
- Channels availables for AV transmission
- Analog television channel (compatibility)Cable
(bandwidth 8 MHz) Satellite (Bandwidth 30-40
MHz)? Capacity around 40 Mbit/sec - Compact disc (CD)For 74 min. play time 1.41
Mbit/sec
21The need for more compression (4/5)
- MPEG-1 target (Moving Picture Expert
Group)(Video-CD 74 min. constraints)Bu
t quality was judged too poor (about VHS quality)
22The need for more compression (5/5)
- MPEG-2 target
- Program stream (DVD)
-
- Transport stream (DVB)
23Principles of compression (1/2)
- Compression (or source coding) is achieved by
suppressing information - redundant information
- irrelevant information
- Suppression of redundant information ? lossless
compression example PCM to DPCM,DCTThe
original signal and the one obtained after
encoding and decoding are identical
24Principles of compression (2/2)
- Suppression of irrelevant information ? lossy
compression Example bandwidth limitation,
masking in audio - The original signal and the one obtained after
encoding and decoding are different but are
perceived as identical
25Agenda
- Introduction - The evolution of Audio/Video
consumer products and the role of compression
techniques. - Audio Video compression principles
- Audio demonstration
- Video demonstration
26Audio Demonstration
- From Borderline Madonna - Stereo - 16
bit/channel - Compression used AAC
Original
705 kbps
Compression
32 kbps
128 kbps
64 kbps
16 kbps
Decompression
-
27MOS scale (1/2)
- Signal distortion is not a good measure of the
performance of a lossy compression method? an
other method is necessary MOS scale (Mean
Opinion Score) - The five-grade CCIR impairment scale
(Rec.562)1(Very annoying), 2(Annoying),
3(Slightly annoying), 4(Perceptible but not
annoying), 5(Imperceptible) - ExampleDouble blind test
28MOS scale (2/2)
29Agenda
- Introduction - The evolution of Audio/Video
consumer products and the role of compression
techniques. - Audio Video compression principles
- Audio demonstration
- Video demonstration
30Compression to VBR or to CBR
- CBR (Constant Bit Rate) vs VBR (Variable Bit
Rate) - Scene more complex ??Higher bit rate for same
quality - CBR ? variable quality (example Video CD
artefact) - Constant quality ? VBR necessary (e.g. DVD-Video)
31Video demonstration
- MPEG-1 Example Video CD standard(288352)video
CBR 1.4 Mbps - MPEG-2 ExampleDVD standard(576720)video VBR
3Mbps
32The compression trade-off
- Compression techniques are still making progress
- Trade-off Complexity/Quality/Bit Rate
- New technique may result in new trade-off
Complexity
Quality
MPEG Layer 2
MPEG Layer 1
MPEG Layer 3
Other Technique Speech coding
MPEG AAC
Bitrate
33(No Transcript)