Subjective Quality Assessment of H.264/AVC Video Streaming with Packet Losses

<p/> <p>Research in the field of video quality assessment relies on the availability of subjective scores, collected by means of experiments in which groups of people are asked to rate the quality of video sequences. The availability of subjective scores is fundamental to enable validati...

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Main Authors: Naccari Matteo, Dufaux Frederic, Tagliasacchi Marco, Tubaro Stefano, De Simone Francesca, Ebrahimi Touradj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2011-01-01
Series:EURASIP Journal on Image and Video Processing
Online Access:http://jivp.eurasipjournals.com/content/2011/190431
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spelling doaj-1bc5780760954df9bc5a8300404635702020-11-24T21:45:12ZengSpringerOpenEURASIP Journal on Image and Video Processing1687-51761687-52812011-01-0120111190431Subjective Quality Assessment of H.264/AVC Video Streaming with Packet LossesNaccari MatteoDufaux FredericTagliasacchi MarcoTubaro StefanoDe Simone FrancescaEbrahimi Touradj<p/> <p>Research in the field of video quality assessment relies on the availability of subjective scores, collected by means of experiments in which groups of people are asked to rate the quality of video sequences. The availability of subjective scores is fundamental to enable validation and comparative benchmarking of the objective algorithms that try to predict human perception of video quality by automatically analyzing the video sequences, in a way to support reproducible and reliable research results. In this paper, a publicly available database of subjective quality scores and corrupted video sequences is described. The scores refer to 156 sequences at CIF and 4CIF spatial resolutions, encoded with H.264/AVC and corrupted by simulating the transmission over an error-prone network. The subjective evaluation has been performed by 40 subjects at the premises of two academic institutions, in standard-compliant controlled environments. In order to support reproducible research in the field of full-reference, reduced-reference, and no-reference video quality assessment algorithms, both the uncompressed files and the H.264/AVC bitstreams, as well as the packet loss patterns, have been made available to the research community.</p>http://jivp.eurasipjournals.com/content/2011/190431
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Naccari Matteo
Dufaux Frederic
Tagliasacchi Marco
Tubaro Stefano
De Simone Francesca
Ebrahimi Touradj
spellingShingle Naccari Matteo
Dufaux Frederic
Tagliasacchi Marco
Tubaro Stefano
De Simone Francesca
Ebrahimi Touradj
Subjective Quality Assessment of H.264/AVC Video Streaming with Packet Losses
EURASIP Journal on Image and Video Processing
author_facet Naccari Matteo
Dufaux Frederic
Tagliasacchi Marco
Tubaro Stefano
De Simone Francesca
Ebrahimi Touradj
author_sort Naccari Matteo
title Subjective Quality Assessment of H.264/AVC Video Streaming with Packet Losses
title_short Subjective Quality Assessment of H.264/AVC Video Streaming with Packet Losses
title_full Subjective Quality Assessment of H.264/AVC Video Streaming with Packet Losses
title_fullStr Subjective Quality Assessment of H.264/AVC Video Streaming with Packet Losses
title_full_unstemmed Subjective Quality Assessment of H.264/AVC Video Streaming with Packet Losses
title_sort subjective quality assessment of h.264/avc video streaming with packet losses
publisher SpringerOpen
series EURASIP Journal on Image and Video Processing
issn 1687-5176
1687-5281
publishDate 2011-01-01
description <p/> <p>Research in the field of video quality assessment relies on the availability of subjective scores, collected by means of experiments in which groups of people are asked to rate the quality of video sequences. The availability of subjective scores is fundamental to enable validation and comparative benchmarking of the objective algorithms that try to predict human perception of video quality by automatically analyzing the video sequences, in a way to support reproducible and reliable research results. In this paper, a publicly available database of subjective quality scores and corrupted video sequences is described. The scores refer to 156 sequences at CIF and 4CIF spatial resolutions, encoded with H.264/AVC and corrupted by simulating the transmission over an error-prone network. The subjective evaluation has been performed by 40 subjects at the premises of two academic institutions, in standard-compliant controlled environments. In order to support reproducible research in the field of full-reference, reduced-reference, and no-reference video quality assessment algorithms, both the uncompressed files and the H.264/AVC bitstreams, as well as the packet loss patterns, have been made available to the research community.</p>
url http://jivp.eurasipjournals.com/content/2011/190431
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