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An experimental survey of no-reference video quality assessment methods

Maria Torres Vega (Department of Electrical Engineering, Einhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands)
Vittorio Sguazzo (Universita degli Studi di Salerno, Fisciano, Italy)
Decebal Constantin Mocanu (Department of Electrical Engineering, Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, Eindhoven, The Netherlands)
Antonio Liotta (Department of Electrical Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands)

International Journal of Pervasive Computing and Communications

ISSN: 1742-7371

Article publication date: 4 April 2016

573

Abstract

Purpose

The Video Quality Metric (VQM) is one of the most used objective methods to assess video quality, because of its high correlation with the human visual system (HVS). VQM is, however, not viable in real-time deployments such as mobile streaming, not only due to its high computational demands but also because, as a Full Reference (FR) metric, it requires both the original video and its impaired counterpart. In contrast, No Reference (NR) objective algorithms operate directly on the impaired video and are considerably faster but loose out in accuracy. The purpose of this paper is to study how differently NR metrics perform in the presence of network impairments.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors assess eight NR metrics, alongside a lightweight FR metric, using VQM as benchmark in a self-developed network-impaired video data set. This paper covers a range of methods, a diverse set of video types and encoding conditions and a variety of network impairment test-cases.

Findings

The authors show the extent by which packet loss affects different video types, correlating the accuracy of NR metrics to the FR benchmark. This paper helps identifying the conditions under which simple metrics may be used effectively and indicates an avenue to control the quality of streaming systems.

Originality/value

Most studies in literature have focused on assessing streams that are either unaffected by the network (e.g. looking at the effects of video compression algorithms) or are affected by synthetic network impairments (i.e. via simulated network conditions). The authors show that when streams are affected by real network conditions, assessing Quality of Experience becomes even harder, as the existing metrics perform poorly.

Keywords

Citation

Torres Vega, M., Sguazzo, V., Mocanu, D.C. and Liotta, A. (2016), "An experimental survey of no-reference video quality assessment methods", International Journal of Pervasive Computing and Communications, Vol. 12 No. 1, pp. 66-86. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPCC-01-2016-0008

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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