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Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient and Low-Complexity Surveillance Video Compression Using Backward-Channel Aware Wyner-Ziv Video Coding

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TLDR
A surveillance video compression system with low-complexity encoder based on Wyner-Ziv coding principles and an error resilience scheme for BCAWZ to address the concern of reliable transmission in the backward-channel, which is essential to the quality of video data for real-time and reliable object detection and event analysis.
Abstract
Video surveillance has been widely used in recent years to enhance public safety and privacy protection. A video surveillance system that deals with content analysis and activity monitoring needs efficient transmission and storage of the surveillance video data. Video compression techniques can be used to achieve this goal by reducing the size of the video with no or small quality loss. State-of-the-art video compression methods such as H.264/AVC often lead to high computational complexity at the encoder, which is generally implemented in a video camera in a surveillance system. This can significantly increase the cost of a surveillance system, especially when a mass deployment of end cameras is needed. In this paper, we discuss the specific considerations for surveillance video compression. We present a surveillance video compression system with low-complexity encoder based on Wyner-Ziv coding principles to address the tradeoff between computational complexity and coding efficiency. In addition, we propose a backward-channel aware Wyner-Ziv (BCAWZ) video coding approach to improve the coding efficiency while maintaining low complexity at the encoder. The experimental results show that for surveillance video contents, BCAWZ can achieve significantly higher coding efficiency than H.264/AVC intra coding as well as existing Wyner-Ziv video coding methods and is close to H.264/AVC inter coding, while maintaining similar coding complexity with intra coding. This shows that the low motion characteristics of many surveillance video contents and the low-complexity encoding requirement make our scheme a particularly suitable candidate for surveillance video compression. We further propose an error resilience scheme for BCAWZ to address the concern of reliable transmission in the backward-channel, which is essential to the quality of video data for real-time and reliable object detection and event analysis.

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Citations
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Semantic based representing and organizing surveillance big data using video structural description technology

TL;DR: A semantic based model is proposed for representing and organizing video big data, and the proposed surveillance video representation method defines a number of concepts and their relations, which allows users to use them to annotate related surveillance events.
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Background-Modeling-Based Adaptive Prediction for Surveillance Video Coding

TL;DR: A background-modeling-based adaptive prediction (BMAP) method that can achieve at least twice the compression ratio on surveillance videos as AVC (MPEG-4 Advanced Video Coding) high profile, yet with a slightly additional encoding complexity.
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Semantic enhanced cloud environment for surveillance data management using video structural description

TL;DR: A semantic based cloud environment is proposed to facilitate the analyzing and searching process of surveillance video data, and an architecture integrating ontology building, semantic annotation, and semantic search is proposedto leverage the semantic description of the video data to find them from concept-based level.
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Video structural description technology for the new generation video surveillance systems

TL;DR: A semantic based model named video structural description (VSD) for representing and organizing the content in videos is proposed, which uses the predefined ontologies including concepts and their semantic relations to represent the contents in videos.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Hybrid Encoder/Decoder Rate Control for Wyner-Ziv Video Coding with a Feedback Channel

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Extrapolating side information for low-delay pixel-domain distributed video coding

TL;DR: This paper proposes a robust extrapolation module to generate the side information based on motion field smoothening to provide improved performance in the context of a low-delay pixel-domain DVC codec.
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TL;DR: This paper presents an iterative motion-compensated interpolation technique that takes advantage of all available information about the frame being estimated, not only the previous and posterior frames as is common practice.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Wyner-Ziv video side estimator: conventional motion search methods revisited

TL;DR: Analytical and simulation results show that while multi-reference motion search is still effective, side estimators are not as sensitive to motion search pixel accuracies.
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