Paper
15 February 2012 Weighted prediction for HEVC
Philippe Bordes, Dominique Thoreau, Philippe Salmon, Pierre Andrivon
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 8305, Visual Information Processing and Communication III; 830504 (2012) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.906747
Event: IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging, 2012, Burlingame, California, United States
Abstract
HEVC is the new video coding standard developed in a joint effort (JCT-VC) by ISO MPEG and ITU-T VCEG. As other state-of-the-art block-based inter-prediction codec, it is very sensitive to illumination variations in-between frames. To cope with this limitation, the weighted prediction (WP) tool has been proposed. A comparison of the performance of WP in HEVC and MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 is carried out. The efficiency of WP is very dependent on the quality of the estimated WP parameters. The different stages of state-of-art WP parameters estimators are discussed and a new algorithm is proposed. It is based on histogram matching with global motion compensation. Several options are evaluated and comparison is made with other existing methods.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Philippe Bordes, Dominique Thoreau, Philippe Salmon, and Pierre Andrivon "Weighted prediction for HEVC", Proc. SPIE 8305, Visual Information Processing and Communication III, 830504 (15 February 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.906747
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Computer programming

Motion estimation

Standards development

Signal processing

Video coding

Digital filtering

Electronic filtering

RELATED CONTENT

Improved lossless intra coding for next generation video coding
Proceedings of SPIE (September 27 2016)
DSP-based real-time video encoding
Proceedings of SPIE (April 19 2000)
Generalized parallelization methodology for video coding
Proceedings of SPIE (December 28 1998)
Multiview video codec based on KTA techniques
Proceedings of SPIE (February 15 2011)

Back to Top