Paper
28 January 2008 Wyner-Ziv coding of 3D dynamic meshes
Chao Chen, Qifei Wang, Qionghai Dai, Zixiang Xiong, Xiaodong Liu
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 6822, Visual Communications and Image Processing 2008; 68221V (2008) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.768814
Event: Electronic Imaging, 2008, San Jose, California, United States
Abstract
Existing 3-D dynamic mesh compression methods directly explore temporal redundancy by predictive coding and the coded bitstreams are sensitive to transmission errors. In this paper, an efficient and error-resilient compression paradigm based on Wyner-Ziv coding (WZC) is proposed. We first apply an anisotropic wavelet transform (AWT) on each frame to explore their spatial redundancy. Then the wavelet coeffcients of every frame are compressed by a Wyner-Ziv codec which is composed of a nested scalar quantizer and a turbo codes based Slepian-Wolf codec. Benefiting from the inherent robustness of WZC, the proposed coding scheme can alleviates the problem of error-propagation associated with conventional predictive coding scheme. Furthermore, based on wavelet transform, our method can be extended to support progressive coding which is desirable for the streaming of 3D meshes. Experimental results show that our scheme is competitive with other compression methods in compression performance. Moreover, our method is more robust when transmission error occurs.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Chao Chen, Qifei Wang, Qionghai Dai, Zixiang Xiong, and Xiaodong Liu "Wyner-Ziv coding of 3D dynamic meshes", Proc. SPIE 6822, Visual Communications and Image Processing 2008, 68221V (28 January 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.768814
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Wavelets

Computer programming

Wavelet transforms

Error control coding

Video coding

Quantization

Video

RELATED CONTENT


Back to Top