Stereoscopic and Multi-View Video Coding Standards. Furht, B., editor In Encyclopedia of Multimedia, pages 827–828. Springer US, 2008. 00000
Stereoscopic and Multi-View Video Coding Standards [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
DefinitionThe Multiview Profile (MVP) extends the well-known hybrid coding toward exploitation of inter-view channel redundancies by implicitly defining disparity-compensated prediction.Stereo video coding is already supported by the MPEG-2 technology, where a corresponding multi-view profile, defined in 1996, is available to transmit two video signals. The main application area of MPEG-2 multiview profile (MVP) is stereoscopic TV. The MVP extends the well-known hybrid coding towards exploitation of inter-view channel redundancies by implicitly defining disparity-compensated prediction. The main new elements are the definition of usage of the temporal scalability (TS) mode for multi-camera sequences, and the definition of acquisition parameters in the MPEG-2 syntax. The TS mode was originally developed to allow the joint encoding of a low frame rate base layer stream and an enhancement layer stream comprised of additional video frames. In the TS mode, temporal prediction of e ...
@incollection{furht_stereoscopic_2008,
	title = {Stereoscopic and {Multi}-{View} {Video} {Coding} {Standards}},
	copyright = {©2008 Springer-Verlag},
	isbn = {978-0-387-74724-8 978-0-387-78414-4},
	url = {http://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-0-387-78414-4_224},
	abstract = {DefinitionThe Multiview Profile (MVP) extends the well-known hybrid coding toward exploitation of inter-view channel redundancies by implicitly defining disparity-compensated prediction.Stereo video coding is already supported by the MPEG-2 technology, where a corresponding multi-view profile, defined in 1996, is available to transmit two video signals. The main application area of MPEG-2 multiview profile (MVP) is stereoscopic TV. The MVP extends the well-known hybrid coding towards exploitation of inter-view channel redundancies by implicitly defining disparity-compensated prediction. The main new elements are the definition of usage of the temporal scalability (TS) mode for multi-camera sequences, and the definition of acquisition parameters in the MPEG-2 syntax. The TS mode was originally developed to allow the joint encoding of a low frame rate base layer stream and an enhancement layer stream comprised of additional video frames. In the TS mode, temporal prediction of e ...},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2016-05-03},
	booktitle = {Encyclopedia of {Multimedia}},
	publisher = {Springer US},
	editor = {Furht, Borko},
	year = {2008},
	note = {00000},
	pages = {827--828}
}

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