Design and Implementation of a Distributed Video Encoder
Date Issued
2014
Date
2014
Author(s)
Chang, Sheng-Hsiang
Abstract
Distributed Video Coding (DVC) is a novel scheme which is different from the state-of-the-art video compression standards. The characteristic of DVC is that there is a low computational complexity encoder. However, there are two issues on the DVC. The first issue is that DVC encoder cannot perform real-time encoding at suitable situations. In order to solve this issue, a hardware architecture of the DVC encoder with a high resource-sharing is proposed in this work to support the real-time encoding of 1080p (1920 1080) video at 30 frames per second. Besides, this hardware architecture also supports the H.264/AVC intra-frame encoding. The other issue is that imbalance coding time exists between the encoder and the decoder. Low-complexity motion estimation algorithm and skip mode have been applied to the encoder of DVC to reduce half of the decoding time. Besides, the rate-distortion performance is improved in high motion videos.
Subjects
Distributed Video Coding
Low Complexity Motion Estimation
Wyner-Ziv Codec
Type
thesis
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