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A Brief Overview of the MPEG2 Standard

A Brief Overview of the MPEG2 Standard. Dr. David Corrigan. MPEG-2 the Basics. We have already covered a lot of the background of how video compression (or coding) works inside MPEG2.

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A Brief Overview of the MPEG2 Standard

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  1. A Brief Overview of the MPEG2 Standard Dr. David Corrigan

  2. MPEG-2 the Basics • We have already covered a lot of the background of how video compression (or coding) works inside MPEG2. • Intra-Coding (I-frames) v Prediction Coding (P-frames) v Bi-Directional Prediction Coding (B-frames) & the Group of Pictures (GOP) • Most of the subsequent coding architecture is inherited from JPEG • DCT. • Quantisation. • Variable Length Coding (VLC) – ie Huffman + Run Length Coding. • But it is not that simple • motion vectors need to be coded, we may need to include direction prediction information • must deal with interlaced video • plus what about audio & subtitles (either in text or lossless image format)? • and what about streaming • so….

  3. MPEG-2 the Basics • MPEG 2 is about more than video coding • Part 1 – Systems (describes how audio and video are plugged together) • Part 2 – Video • Part 3 – Audio (an extension of the MPEG 1 audio standards) • Part 4 – conformance testing • Part 5 – software simulation • Part 6 – Digital Storage Media Command and Control – (eg. rewind forward etcetc) • Part 7 – Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) – a 2nd audio standard • there are even more parts

  4. Challenges in MPEG2 (besides compression) • Multiplexing • How to combine audio video and text? • They must appear at the same time. • Media • Streams can be stored on a hard drive or DVD • Data can be broadcast or streamed on the internet • Sequencing • how to send data so that it will be received in the correct order? • how to synchronise the decoder and encoder?

  5. Challenges in MPEG2 (besides compression) • Error Resilience • like synchronisation in JPEG. • but temporal propagation of errors is a problem in video. • Rate Control/Bandwidth • need to be able to specify a bit rate given the bandwidth available • need to be able to adaptive adjust the quantisation step size • Scalability/Multiplatform • adaptive quality based on the decoder hardware • can we have one stream for both low and high quality video?

  6. Scalability in MPEG 2 SNR Scalability Spatial Scalability

  7. Profiles and Levels • MPEG 2 supports a wide variety of scenarios • eg. high quality tv broadcast, low bit rate internet streaming etc • decoders can have varying degrees of complexity • a decoder for internet streaming should not have to support decoding of digital tv signals. • MPEG 2 defines Profiles and Level for streams • Profiles define the required decoder complexity (feature set) to decode the stream • Levels define the maximum allowed resolution frame rate and bit rate.

  8. Levels in MPEG 2

  9. Levels in MPEG 2

  10. Allowed Profile/Level Combinations 4:2:2 profile extends on the main profile but does not support scalabilty

  11. Profile/Level Combinations • Standard Definition TV uses the Main Profile and the Main Level • allows bi-directional prediction but not scalability and stream must use 4:2:0 YCbCrchromadownsampling • Streams have a max resolution of 720x576, max frame rate of 30 fps and max bit rate of 15 mbits/second • also used on DVDs • HDTV uses the Main Profile and the High Level • The Main Profile defines the core set of algorithms in MPEG 2.

  12. MPEG 2 Main Profile (Layers) • MPEG Sequence is organised into a hierarchy of layers, like an onion • The Sequence Layer – the entire video sequence • The GOP Layer – delineating exactly one Group of Pictures (PAL max 15, NTSC max 18 frames) • The Picture Layer – referring to a single I- P- or B-frame. • The Slice Layer – represents a horizontal group of macroblocks that does not span multiple rows. • The MacroblockLayer – represents unit of data for motion estimation (16x16). Consists of blocks for luminance and chrominance. • The Block Layer – contains the DCT coefficients for 1 8x8 block of pixels (can be either a luminance of chrominance block).

  13. The GOP Layer (Frame Ordering) • When using IBBP…. prediction mode we have to reorder frames so that all prediction is “backward” (ie. causal) • so if a B-frame requires a subsequent P-frame for forward prediction the p-frame is placed first in the stream. B-frames from previous GOP come after I frame P-frame 4 is sent before B-frames 2 and 3

  14. The Picture Layer (Interlacing) • The odd and even fields can be coded together as if it were a frame or the can be coded independently • if there is no motion then we can combine the two fields into a single image called a “frame-picture.” Better for compression efficiency. • if there is motion then the two fields are coded separately as if they were two pictures called “field-pictures”. Even Field-Picture Frame Picture Odd Field-Picture

  15. The Slice Layer (Synchronisation) • Slices can be of arbitrary length but can not extend onto a new line. • They are the MPEG-2 solution to the problem of spatial synchronisation (errors can not propagate spatially between slices). • Slice length set depending on the error conditions • ie. shorter when the error rate is high. • Can get temporal propagation of errors too but they can not extend longer than 1 GOP because of the prediction strategy.

  16. The Macroblock Layer • Each macroblock contains 4 luminance blocks and 2 chrominance blocks if 4:2:0 (4 chrominance if 4:2:2) • I-frame macroblocks contain no vectors, 1 vector in P-frames and 2 in B-frames. If interlaced then the number of vectors doubles. • Macroblocks for P- and B-frames can be intra-coded if the prediction error (DFD) is too large. • Motion estimator not specified but the vectors are limited in range and are quantised to 0.5 pixel accuracy.

  17. Coding of Motion Vectors • Motion Vectors are differentially coded wrt the vector for the previous macroblock (ie. to the left) • PMV – previous motion vector. • MV – motion vector for the current macroblock. • Define . • multiply by 2 as 0.5 pel quantisation used. • and are coded separately.

  18. Coding Δx and Δy • The absolute value and sign of each component is coded seperately. The absolute value is broken down as • – is called the motion_code and ranges from 0 to 16. It is Huffman Coded • – is called the size and effectively limits the range of motion vector. It ranges from 0 to 8. It is not Huffman Coded (four bit binary value). • – is the motion_residual. It ranges from 0 to and is not Huffman Coded. It is a -bit binary number.

  19. Coding Δx and Δy • A table of how the choice of Size effects the range of difference that can be coded. • Size is set once at the start of each Picture Layer. (ie. it is the same over the entire picture). • It is common to choose larger size for P-frames because the motion is bigger.

  20. Coding Δx and Δy • Size is chosen based on the range of motion vectors. • eg. say we limit search width to 10. Then we could have a vector [10, 10] and a previous vector [-10 -10]. • The max or is . Therefore we need to choose . • Given an MV [4.5, 3] and PMV [5, -1] then Then for ,

  21. Huffman Codes for motion_code • s is 0 if the component is positive and 1 if negative. • each vector is specified by a (motion_code, motion_residual) pair. • the Size value is specified at the start of the Picture Layer. • If then we set the motion_code to 0 (codeword is 1). There is no motion_residual.

  22. Example • if then the motion_code is 1, the sign bit is 1 and the motion_residual is 0. Therefore the code is inserted into the bitstream • if then the motion_code is 2, the sign bit is 0 and the motion_residual is 3. Therefore the code is inserted into the bitstream

  23. The Block Layer (Quantisation) Quantisation step size for prediction-coded blocks Quantisation step sizes for intra-coded blocks similar to the matrix used in JPEG a fixed Qstep = 16 for all coefficients These are the default quantisation tables

  24. The Block Layer (Quantisation) • One of the ways rate control is achieved is by increasing the quantisation step size in blocks which would otherwise have a higher entropy. • We can specify a quantisation scale value that scales the coefficients of the Q matrix. • ie. the effective step sizes are • This will reduce quality if the scale is greater than 1 and increase it if the scale is greater than 1. • This is why low bit-rate video degrades in quality when there is large/fast motion • The encoder has to increase quantisation step sizes to maintain bit rate.

  25. The Block Layer (Scan Order) Scan Order for Progressive Video Scan Order for Interlaced Video

  26. The Block Layer (Scan Order) • Idea is to maximise length of runs of zeros in the block. • So progressive frames use the zig-zag scan like JPEG • Interlaced Frames use an alternative scan because there are likely to be non-zero DCT coefficients toward the bottom left corner of the block.

  27. Sequencing, Media and Multiplexing • We could have multiple elementary streams (ie. video, audio, text etc.). They have to combined into a single non-elementary stream and have to be both decoded and displayed in a certain order in the receiver. • The MPEG 2 Part 1 (Systems) standard specifies two different ways of doing this • Program Stream (PS) – used for reliable media such as DVDs • Transport Stream (TS) – used for Digital TV Transmission over noisy channels. • Note there are other ways of doing this that exist outside of the standard • eg. the avi and mov file formats can be used with compressed MPEG2 data. • To do this the notions of time and packets are introduced. • each elementary stream is divided into packets. They can be of fixed or variable length. • these packets are interleaved by the encoder. • each packet carries a timestamp which tells the decoder the correct order.

  28. MPEG 2 Program Stream (PS) • Consists of Packetised Elementary Stream (PES) packets. • PES packets contain 2 timestamps • Decoding Time Stamp (DTS) – this tells the decoder when the packet should be decoded. The data is then decoded into the bit stream. • Presentation Time Stamp (PTS) – this tells the decoder when the data should be displayed. • The systems part specifies that the decoder must contain a Systems Clock called the STC • when a decoder’s STC is equal to a packet’s DTS the data in the packet is decoded • when the STC is equal to a packet’s PTS the decoded data is sent to the display device (eg. graphics card or sound card) • the state of the encoders clock is placed in the stream at regular intervals. This synchronises the decoder with the encoder.

  29. MPEG-2 Transport Stream (TS) • The transport stream uses a fixed packet length (188 bytes) • this allows easy decoder/encoder synchronisation. • it also allows error correction codes to be inserted. • Transport Streams can contain packets from a number of Programs • These can be different TV channels or maybe an EPG. • Each program has a unique Packet ID placed in the packet header. • Decoder can discard packets of other programs by checking the PID.

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