We present a Bayesian model that allows to auto- matically generate fixations/foveations and that can be suitably exploited for compression purposes. The twofold aim of this work is to investigate how the exploitation of high-level perceptual cues provided by human faces occurring in the video can enhance the compression process without reducing the perceived quality of the video and to validate such assumption with an extensive and principled experimental protocol. To such end, the model integrates top-down and bottom-up cues to choose the fixation point on a video frame: at the highest level, a fixation is driven by prior information and by relevant objects, namely human faces, within the scene; at the same time, local saliency together with novel and abrupt visual events contribute by triggering lower level control. The performance of the resulting video compression system has been evaluated with respect to both the perceived quality of foveated video clips and the compression gain with an extensive evaluation campaign, which has eventually involved 200 subjects.

Bayesian Integration of Face and Low-Level Cues for Foveated Video Coding

MARCELLI, Angelo;NAPOLETANO, PAOLO;
2008-01-01

Abstract

We present a Bayesian model that allows to auto- matically generate fixations/foveations and that can be suitably exploited for compression purposes. The twofold aim of this work is to investigate how the exploitation of high-level perceptual cues provided by human faces occurring in the video can enhance the compression process without reducing the perceived quality of the video and to validate such assumption with an extensive and principled experimental protocol. To such end, the model integrates top-down and bottom-up cues to choose the fixation point on a video frame: at the highest level, a fixation is driven by prior information and by relevant objects, namely human faces, within the scene; at the same time, local saliency together with novel and abrupt visual events contribute by triggering lower level control. The performance of the resulting video compression system has been evaluated with respect to both the perceived quality of foveated video clips and the compression gain with an extensive evaluation campaign, which has eventually involved 200 subjects.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11386/1866914
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