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Journal ArticleDOI

Network-embedded FEC for optimum throughput of multicast packet video $

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TLDR
This paper analyzes and optimize the impact of network-embedded FEC (NEF) in overlay and p2p multimedia multicast networks and develops an optimization algorithm for the placement of NEF codecs within random multicast trees.
Abstract
Forward error correction (FEC) schemes have been proposed and used successfully for multicasting realtime video content to groups of users. Under traditional IP multicast, application-level FEC can only be implemented on an end-to-end basis between the sender and the clients. Emerging overlay and peer-to-peer (p2p) networks open the door for new paradigms of network FEC. The deployment of FEC within these emerging networks has received very little attention (if any). In this paper, we analyze and optimize the impact of network-embedded FEC (NEF) in overlay and p2p multimedia multicast networks. Under NEF, we place FEC codecs in selected intermediate nodes of a multicast tree. The NEF codecs detect and recover lost packets within FEC blocks at earlier stages before these blocks arrive at deeper intermediate nodes or at the final leaf nodes. This approach significantly reduces the probability of receiving undecodable FEC blocks. In essence, the proposed NEF codecs work as signal regenerators in a communication system and can reconstruct most of the lost data packets without requiring retransmission. We develop an optimization algorithm for the placement of NEF codecs within random multicast trees. Based on extensive H.264 video simulations, we show that this approach provides significant improvements in video quality, both visually and in terms of PSNR values.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Network Coding Meets Multimedia: A Review

TL;DR: This paper reviews the recent work in NC for multimedia applications and focuses on the techniques that fill the gap between NC theory and practical applications, and outlines the benefits of NC and presents the open challenges in this area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Joint Uplink and Downlink Optimization for Real-Time Multiuser Video Streaming Over WLANs

TL;DR: A network-aware and source-aware video streaming system is proposed to support interactive multiuser communications within single-cell and multicell IEEE 802.11 networks and can provide more uniform video quality for all users and lower quality fluctuation for each received video sequence.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Raptor network video coding

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

An overview of network coding for multimedia streaming

TL;DR: The objective of this paper is to survey recent developments of network coding, with specific focus on multimedia streaming, and review some recent works that develop network coding principles in media streaming applications.

ResearchArticle Traffic and Quality Characterization of the H.264/AVC Scalable Video Coding Extension

TL;DR: Overall, it is found that SVC achieves significantly higher compression ratios than MPEG-4 Part 2, but produces unprecedented levels of traffic variability, thus presenting new challenges for the network transport of scalable video.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Chord: A scalable peer-to-peer lookup service for internet applications

TL;DR: Results from theoretical analysis, simulations, and experiments show that Chord is scalable, with communication cost and the state maintained by each node scaling logarithmically with the number of Chord nodes.
Book ChapterDOI

Pastry: Scalable, Decentralized Object Location, and Routing for Large-Scale Peer-to-Peer Systems

TL;DR: Pastry as mentioned in this paper is a scalable, distributed object location and routing substrate for wide-area peer-to-peer ap- plications, which performs application-level routing and object location in a po- tentially very large overlay network of nodes connected via the Internet.
Proceedings Article

A case for end system multicast

TL;DR: The potential benefits of transferring multicast functionality from end systems to routers significantly outweigh the performance penalty incurred and the results indicate that the performance penalties are low both from the application and the network perspectives.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scribe: a large-scale and decentralized application-level multicast infrastructure

TL;DR: Simulation results, based on a realistic network topology model, show that Scribe scales across a wide range of groups and group sizes, and balances the load on the nodes while achieving acceptable delay and link stress when compared with Internet protocol multicast.
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