Abstract

User expectations have a crucial impact on the levels of quality of experience (QoE) that they consider acceptable or satisfying. Measuring acceptability and annoyance has mainly been performed in separate or multi-step experiments without any control over participants’ expectations. This paper introduces a simple methodology to obtain the information about both of the entities in a single step and compares several data processing strategies useful for results interpretation. A specifically designed subjective experiment, conducted on compressed videos, has shown that the multi-step procedures could be replaced by our proposed single-step approach, regardless of the viewing conditions, while the novel approach is significantly preferred by observers for its low time requirements and higher intuitiveness. The test has simultaneously proven that user expectations can be altered by the instructions and it is, therefore, possible to simulate different user profiles regardless of the participants’ real habits. The acceptability/annoyance experimental results are also used to benchmark the state-of-the-art objective video quality metrics in predicting acceptability/annoyance of QoE. A case study on the determination of the threshold of acceptability/annoyance for objective quality metrics is conducted, which can be served as a guideline for video streaming service providers.

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