XClose

Institute of Communications and Connected Systems

Home
Menu

Sequence-Level Reference Frames In Video Coding

IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology | Jubran M, Abbas A, Andreopoulos Y | The proliferation of low-cost DRAM chipsets now begins to allow for the consideration of substan...

1 April 2021

Sequence-Level Reference Frames In Video Coding

Abstract

The proliferation of low-cost DRAM chipsets now begins to allow for the consideration of substantially-increased decoded picture buffers in advanced video coding standards such as HEVC, VVC, and Google VP9. At the same time, the increasing demand for rapid scene changes and multiple scene repetitions in entertainment or broadcast content indicates that extending the frame referencing interval to tens of minutes or even the entire video sequence may offer coding gains, as long as one is able to identify frame similarity in a computationally- and memory-efficient manner. Motivated by these observations, we propose a “stitching” method that defines a reference buffer and a reference frame selection algorithm. Our proposal extends the referencing interval of inter-frame video coding to the entire length of video sequences. Our reference frame selection algorithm uses well-established feature descriptor methods that describe frame structural elements in a compact and semantically-rich manner. We propose to combine such compact descriptors with a similarity scoring mechanism in order to select the frames to be “stitched” to reference picture buffers of advanced inter-frame encoders like HEVC, VVC, and VP9 without breaking standard compliance. Our evaluation on synthetic and real-world video sequences with the HEVC and VVC reference encoders shows that our method offers significant rate gains, with complexity and memory requirements that remain manageable for practical encoders and decoders.

Publication Type:Journal article
Publication Sub Type:Article
Authors:Jubran M, Abbas A, Andreopoulos Y 
Publisher:IEEE 
Publication date:01/04/2021
Pagination:1
Journal:IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology
Status:Published
Print ISSN:1051-8215
DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TCSVT.2021.3070423
Full Text URL:https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10126903/

Explore how UCL research is advancing the future technologies of a connected world: